View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Filter by:Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a pervasive, insidious condition associated with catastrophic socioeconomic, healthcare and personal implications. This proposal outlines how a group singing intervention, led by clinical personnel and a community singing leader, can address these challenges. Built upon existing ties between the Principal Investigator (PI) and local COPD support group, this project is co-designed by patients and clinicians. Modelled on similar interventions internationally, this project is pioneering in Ireland. Outputs will include a participant-led symposium and three community COPD choirs, in addition to a number of academic publications. This project is funded by the Irish Research Council (IRC) "New Foundations" scheme.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is characterized by a chronic airflow limitation associated with an abnormal inflammatory response of the airways to inhaled noxious particles or gases. It is the third leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for approximately 3 million deaths each year and the prevalence is predicted to increase even further during the coming decade (WHO 2015). In the last two decades, there has been a disappointing lack of fundamental breakthroughs in the understanding of the pathophysiology of COPD and there is currently no pharmacological treatment available that halts its relentless progression. A clear alternative for describing COPD does not exist either, while the identification of subgroups of COPD patients based on clinical, genomic and epigenomic factors would be useful. A clinically relevant phenotype with high potential of having a genetic cause is severe early-onset COPD (SEO-COPD), defined by severe airflow obstruction (FEV1 ≤ 40% predicted) at a relatively young age (≤53 years) [1]. In the UMCG, we have a continuous flow of severe COPD patients who are referred to our hospital for bronchoscopic lung volume reduction treatment or lung transplantation. Approximately 40-50% of these patients fulfil the criteria for SEO-COPD. As part of a previously approved study ("Phenotyping in COPD", METc 2014/102), these patients are routinely characterized when they are willing to participate in this study and gave their written informed consent. Characterization is performed using lung function (i.e. spirometry, body box), clinical (i.e. questionnaires, physical examination, measurement of waist-hip ratio), radiologic (HRCT-scan) and systemic parameters (venous blood collection). Moreover, the following additional samples are being extracted: bronchial biopsies, bronchial brushes and nasal brushes. There are two objectives this study adds. The primary objective is to identify the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying SEO-COPD by using the bronchial brushes and biopsies that are already extracted from the SEO-COPD patients. The secondary objective is to add two control groups (i.e. mild-moderate COPD group and healthy non-COPD control group) matched for age and smoking habits (all COPD patients referred for BLVRT or lung transplantation are ex-smokers). Hopefully, this will eventually explore COPD susceptibility and its genetic cause, resulting in a more tailored treatment of this COPD subset.
TARGET-RWE is a 10-year, international, longitudinal, observational study of patients with chronic disease designed to specifically address important clinical questions that remain incompletely answered from registration trials. The protocol will follow a master protocol design in which a shared study infrastructure supports progressive development of the registry across the spectrum of chronic diseases.
The combination of heart failure (HF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is highly prevalent, but underdiagnosed and poorly recognized. It has been suggested that the decline in functional capacity is associated with musculoskeletal and systemic changes than primary organ (heart and/or lung) failure. In addition, it is recognized that both diseases have several mechanisms that are responsible for musculoskeletal impairment. However, the association of reduced systemic perfusion with low oxygen content observed in the association of HF and COPD may contribute to the worsening of the components of the muscle impairment cascade. Thus, muscle strength and fatigue may not only be even more altered but may also be the main determinants of functional capacity in patients with coexistence of HF and COPD. Although many studies have evaluated the muscle performance of patients with HF or COPD, the literature did not show data on worsening due to the association of the diseases. Particularities identification of the muscle impairment in the coexistence of HF and COPD is fundamental for the development of rehabilitation strategies, mainly through physical exercise. In this line, the present study tested the hypothesis that the coexistence of HF and COPD could present lower values of strength and greater fatigue. Similarly, the muscle dysfunction degree could strongly correlate with the performance markers of the incremental or functional tests in patients with HF associated with COPD. The study protocol was reviewed and approved by the Institutional Research Board. All subjects gave written informed consent before participating in the study.
The main objective of this study is to assess the effects of a myofascial release protocol in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Obstructive Pulmonary Disease(COPD) treatment, leading to the role of nurses to become more and more important. An Education-Based Intervention Program(EBIP) consists of several steps that aim to achieve better health outcomes through guidingCOPD patients to reduce dyspnea symptoms and improve chronic self-care management skills. The aim of this study is to evaluate the dyspnea and chronic self-care management outcomes of EBIP compared to routine care. Research Hypotheses: H0: EBIP has no effect on dyspnea or chronic self-care management in COPD patients. H1: EBIP effects dyspnea outcomes of COPD patients. H2: EBIP effects chronic self-care management outcomes of COPD patients.
The chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients with type II respiratory failure always needs PaCO2 test to monitor the changes of disease. Method used mostly nowadays to detect PaCO2 is arterial puncture which is accurate but is invasive, painful and non-dynamic. Noninvasive measurement methods includes end-tidal CO2 (PetCO2), transcutaneous CO2 (PtcCO2) which can monitor the PaCO2 dynamically and noninvasively, but their accuracy is in controversy. Common PetCO2 is especially inaccurate in COPD patients while our team find that the accuracy can be improved by prolong expiration method (PetCO2 (P)).So the investigators want to compare the accuracy of PtcCO2 and PetCO2(P) in AECOPD patients during noninvasive ventilation(NIV).
The aim of this prospective observational trial is to evaluate the influence of Coping strategies on pulmonary rehabilitation outcomes like 6-minute walk distance and Quality of life.
Rationale: A big step forward and great opportunity to improve overall efficacy of bronchoscopic lung volume reductioen is to combine treatment modalities aiming to close the dependent collateral channels and then proceed with EBV therapy to induce lobar collapse, and thus maximal treatment effect. Objective: Primary objective: 1. To investigate the feasibility of injecting AeriSeal into the interlobar collateral ventilation channels region to make the target lobe suitable for endobronchial valve treatment. Secondary objectives: 2. To investigate the safety of injecting AeriSeal into the interlobar collateral ventilation channels region to make the target lobe suitable for endobronchial valve treatment. 3. To investigate the effectiveness of injecting AeriSeal into the interlobar collateral ventilation channels region to make the target lobe suitable for endobronchial valve treatment.
This study aims to investigate the effect of education and tele-consultancy intervention based on Watson's Human Care Theory on self-efficacy and quality of life of individuals with COPD.