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NCT ID: NCT04668807 Not yet recruiting - Medical Device Clinical Trials

Technical Capabilities of the "SMART ANGEL Intra-hospital" System 's Connected Medical Device (CMD)

SMART-METRO
Start date: December 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Post-operative mortality in case of scheduled surgery is 3% in France (Lancet 2013) mainly due to cardiovascular or respiratory complications, by decompensation of pre-existing pathologies. Complications due to the medical practice are the third cause of morbidity(BMJ, 2016). More than half are preventable and are mainly observed in surgical patients. In conventional hospitalization, excluding intensive care, monitoring is done discontinuously for most of the patients, which does not allow early diagnosis of a vital cardiovascular or respiratory failure. Diagnosis and late treatment do not allow good recovery. The early identification of a vital failure by the continuous monitoring of three simple physiological parameters (SpO2, heart rate and respiratory rate) would allow faster management by the hospital staff and a reduction in immediate and possibly delayed postoperative mortality.

NCT ID: NCT04668716 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

Brain Involvement in Dystrophinopathies Part 2

Start date: October 11, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of this study is to understand the relationship between DMD and BMD brain comorbidities, and the location of the gene mutation which causes the disease.

NCT ID: NCT04668677 Completed - Clinical trials for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture

Return to Work and Functional Results of French Soldiers After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction

Start date: December 10, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The return to work in the military population after surgical reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) has been poorly investigated within the French armed forces. Only American studies are available and show that this surgery has a significant impact on the operational capacity of soldiers. ACL rupture is extremely frequent in active populations. This pathology has already been extensively explored in at-risk populations, particularly in sports. Most studies show that the resumption of sport is greatly affected by this pathology. Furthermore, an over-risk (10 times greater incidence of ACL rupture) in the military has been demonstrated.

NCT ID: NCT04668651 Completed - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Preoperative Evaluation of Gastric Contents by Antral Ultrasound in Diabetic Patients

PEGASED
Start date: January 12, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Gastric aspiration represents the third cause of perioperative death in France. In scheduled surgery, it can be prevented by preoperative fasting. The French and American guidelines recommend a fasting of 2 hours for clear liquids and 6 hours for solid food. However, these durations could be too short in case of delayed gastric emptying due to medications of diabetes for example. This latter condition has an increasing incidence. Numerous complications are related to chronic hyperglycemia including delayed gastric emptying also known as gastroparesis. Around one third of diabetic patients presents this complication. Gastric ultrasound represents a non-invasive method to explore the stomach. It allows the qualitative and quantitative evaluations of gastric content. As diabetic patients present a risk of non-empty stomach despite fasting,investigators decided to conduct a prospective observational study compare the appearance of the stomach assessed by ultrasonography between diabetic and non-diabetic patients before scheduled surgery

NCT ID: NCT04668638 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hyperventilation Syndrome

Impact of Respiratory Rehabilitation on Quality of Life in Patients With Hyperventilation Syndrome

RESPIR-HVS
Start date: March 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The hyperventilation syndrome is a quite frequent pathology, affecting up to 10% of the general population and 40% of the asthmatic population. Its physiopathology is still badly known and even if it is a benign affection, its associated comorbidities and symptomatology greatly decrease the patients' quality of life. Yet, no medicinal treatments have been proved useful, but prescribers noticed improvements after physiotherapy. Given that the physiotherapy impact on hyperventilation syndrome is not well described in the literature, this study aims to scientifically ascertain physiotherapy benefits on quality of life and symptomatology in hyperventilation syndrome-suffering patients.

NCT ID: NCT04668170 Completed - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Predictive Immune Biomarkers of COVID-19 Pathogenesis to Influence Therapeutic Management

IMMUNOMARKCOV
Start date: May 5, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Persons infected with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) SARS-CoV-2 vary in severity from being asymptomatic to having fever, cough, sore throat, general weakness and fatigue and muscular pain and in the most severe cases, severe pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome and sepsis potentially leading to death. Predictive markers of clinical worsening after admission are lacking. COVID-19 immunopathogenesis and relevant therapeutic strategies are still under investigation. Although viral shedding peaks during the first week of symptoms, reports show that clinical deterioration often coincides with the development of host antiviral immune responses. The inflammatory response to SARS-CoV-2 infection may underpin COVID-19 pathogenesis leading to aberrant and excessive immune responses that may enter the pulmonary circulation in large numbers and play an immune damaging role causing lung functional disability resulting in clinical worsening. Therapeutic strategies using corticosteroids or biotherapies targeting IL-6 may be valuable in some patients. Based on a better understanding of COVID-19 immunopathogenesis, the identification of predictive biomarkers early in the disease process would be of outstanding interest to tailor prompt therapeutic interventions. On these bases, the present project aims to unravel, using innovative integrated multimodal immunological approaches, immunologic predictive markers by finely characterizing from their admission innate and adaptive immune responses in two well described cohorts of COVID-19 patients that are being collected in Toulouse (COVID-BioToul) and Bordeaux (COLCOV-19 BX).Those two biological cohorts are connected with two clinical cohorts in Toulouse and Bordeaux in order to have a very well defined population of COVID-19 patients and their clinical outcome. In both cohorts, investigators harvest and cryopreserve biological samples, including plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), on admission and longitudinally from patients evolving or not toward severe forms of the disease in Bordeaux and Toulouse University Hospitals and will allow to investigate primary and secondary objectives. Moreover in the two centers, there are also two clinical outpatients cohorts of healthcare workers attending dedicated clinics in the frame of their surveillance medical program, which constitute groups of patients with benign forms of COVID-19.

NCT ID: NCT04667962 Completed - Burnout, Caregiver Clinical Trials

Impact of the Change in Hospital Service of Caregivers During COVID-19 Health Crisis on Operational Strain

CovIdeDocS
Start date: December 23, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The French Armed Forces Health Service caregivers are confronted with specific operational constraints that require physiological adaptation on a daily basis. These constraints generate an allostatic load resulting from the body's adaptation to the environment through stress response systems. The COVID-19 health crisis has modified the physical and psychological constraints linked to usual activity, in particular by imposing versatility to caregivers. The research hypothesis is that carers who have undergone activity reorganisations, and in particular a change of service, are more affected by the health crisis than those who have remained in their service and have continued an activity close to their usual practice.

NCT ID: NCT04667806 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Lung Transplantation

Health Related Quality of Life in Lung Transplantation in Strasbourg

Start date: April 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of this study is to study the quality of life in lung transplant patients. The cohort includes all of the surviving and transplanted patients at the New Civil Hospital in Strasbourg between 2008 and 2018. The main objective is to assess the quality of life of this cohort by two questionnaires which are the SF36 (generic score) and the saint Georges's questionnaire (specific score). The secondary objectives are the measurement of survival after lung transplantation, the comparison of the quality of life of these patients with that of the general population by the SF36 questionnaire, the search for perioperative factors influencing the quality of life and finally the search for an association between quality of life and socio-professional life.

NCT ID: NCT04667650 Completed - Clinical trials for Ocular Myasthenia Gravis

Ocular Mysathenia Gravis Generalization

MYASTEN
Start date: January 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Secondary ocular myasthenia gravis (OMG) generalization represents a pejorative evolution and no validated generalization prevention strategy exists. The aim of this observational study was to determine the percentage of patients with OMG generalization and identify factors predictive of that pejorative evolution. Data from patients with OMG registered in the Fondation Hospital A. de Rothschild database between January 1990 and January 2017 were collected. Among the 183 patients registered in this database, 151 patients with available informations were analyzed.

NCT ID: NCT04667403 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Telemedicine in the Management of Pain in Patients With Advanced or Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer

PANTELO
Start date: February 7, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adenocarcinoma of the pancreas is a major public health issue because of its disastrous prognosis. The symptomatology of locally advanced or metastatic forms, particularly painful, is often major and difficult to balance, impacting both the quality of life of patients (and those around them) and the course of treatment (chemotherapy). The objective of this study is to evaluate the interest and feasibility of telemedicine in the management of pain in patients undergoing treatment for advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer.