View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Filter by:In this trial, the investigators will evaluate the effect of acetazolamide (375 mg per day) vs. placebo on sleep related breathing disturbances at altitude in patients with COPD.
In this trial, the investigators will evaluate the effect of acetazolamide (375 mg per day) vs. placebo on exercise performance at altitude in patients with COPD.
In this trial, the investigators will evaluate the effect of acetazolamide (375 mg per day) vs. placebo on postural control at acute altitude exposure in patients with COPD.
Aging of the population is dramatically increasing the number of hospitalized patients, with the consequent challenges of limited medical personnel and resources in hospitals. Wireless technologies that create highly connected healthcare environments are developed to help hospitals address these issues, once these technologies are perfectly integrated in the hospital environment with respect to IT infrastructure for big data storage. Such devices have proven remarkable efficiencies in monitoring patients with high patient safety, data accuracy and security, which are essential to provide high quality patient care, reduce health-related costs and optimize the management of high numbers of patients. Cough is the most common condition that results in a visit to the physician. Often coughs are benign, but sometimes can be the sign of exacerbations of a chronic respiratory disease. Exacerbations are defined in the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) document "as an acute event characterised by a worsening of the patient's respiratory symptoms that is beyond normal day-to-day variations and leads to a change in medication". It is assumed that, if coughs were remotely monitored, hospitals might be unburdened, patients would be empowered to self-manage their health, and that prevention of serious respiratory diseases might be facilitated, thus improving health outcomes. Unfortunately, remote monitoring for cough that rely on self-reporting is impractical, as patients do not record data very reliably. On the contrary, a bed sensor under the mattress connected to a medical data analysis platform might monitor patients' micro-movements at night and alert the medical staff as soon as there is a cough exacerbation.
The investigators aim to determine the optimal number of measurements required for multiple-breath-washout derived lung function parameters in adults with pulmonary disease as well as in healthy controls
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is the third leading cause of death, affects over 24 million people in the US and is the leading cause of disability with projected healthcare costs at almost $50 billion. The goal of this study is to identify novel and potentially powerful targets for behavioral interventions in COPD which has been understudied despite its tremendous detrimental impact on overall public health.
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of supplemental oxygen on blood oxygenation at rest in Patients with severe to very severe COPD comparing the portable oxygen concentrator (Activox™ 4L) to a liquid continuous oxygen device (Companion®).
This trial will evaluate the effect of acetazolamide (375 mg per day) vs. placebo on right ventricular function at acute altitude exposure in patients with COPD.
The current protocol is developed in the context of a large Research and Innovation (R&I) program aiming the promotion of daily life physical activity in chronic patients registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02976064) and approved by the ethical committee of the Hospital Clinic de Barcelona (HCB/2016/0883). The project is partly supported by the Smart Innovation Strategies promoted by the EU Commission (COMRDI15-1-0016). Specifically, the protocol uses retrospective information collected between 2005-2008 as part of the EU project Biobridge (LSHG-CT-2006-037939). The aims of the current analysis of the retrospective information are 1) to assess training-induced changes in muscle oxygen saturation (StO2) assessed by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) during constant-work rate cycling exercise (CWRE) as a useful marker of the effects of training at limb muscle level in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and 2) to further explore underlying mechanisms of skeletal muscle dysfunction as a characteristic systemic effect of COPD, potentially modifiable with preventive interventions as endurance muscle training. Methods: Incremental exercise (VO2 peak) and CWRE at 70% baseline peak work rate, before and after 8-week of endurance exercise training, were done in healthy sedentary subjects and COPD patients. NIRS was used to assess StO2 in the left "vastus internus" during the CWRE (before an after training program) (objective 1); and blood samples and muscle biopsies of the quadriceps were obtained at rest (before an after training program) (objective 2).
This trial will evaluate the effect of acetazolamide (375 mg per day) vs. placebo on right ventricular function during exercise at acute altitude exposure in patients with COPD.