There are about 25435 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in United Kingdom. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety, tolerability and blood levels of orally administered anle138b as well as the effect of food and early signs of efficacy in patients with mild to moderate Parkinson´s disease.
This is a study to compare safety and efficacy of inhaled isoflurane delivered by the AnaConDa-S versus intravenous midazolam for sedation in mechanically ventilated children admitted to an intensive care unit.
The study aims is to find out if people with type 1 diabetes diagnosed in later life (after age 30) have the same rapid loss of insulin secretion (measured using C-peptide) that occurs in younger adults with type 1 diabetes. The investigators will recruit 135 participants aged over 30 years with a clinical diagnosis of type 1 diabetes and diabetes duration ≤100 days. The investigators will also recruit a comparison group of 61 participants aged 18-30 with a clinical diagnosis of type 1 diabetes and diabetes duration ≤100 days. C-peptide will be measured during mixed meal tolerance tests (MMTT) performed at baseline, 6 months and a year. This study also aims to test a new more practical way of monitoring insulin secretion at home using a finger prick 'blood spot' rather than time consuming tests in a hospital. Finger-prick C-peptide samples will be collected after the MMTT and by the participants at home throughout the year.
This project will produce a low cost, ergonomic, hood integrated PAPR for use initially within the NHS. It will focus on user centred design, engineering optimisation, feasibility testing, certification and intellectual property protection. This study will evaluate the pre-CE marked Bubble PAPR prototype PPE in the clinical environment and gather usability data from consenting participants (staff).
Background: Reminding people they are moral adaptable human beings ("self-affirming") reduces the perceived stigma associated with wearing hearing aids and increases actual hearing aid use. The proposed study aims to reduce stigma in a representative sample of people aged over 60 from the general population who may or may not already be wearing hearing aids and improve multiple hearing health outcomes (e.g., attending screening, device use). Methods/Design: Double-blinded randomized controlled trial in which a representative sample of people aged over 60 from the general population will be asked to complete surveys about hearing stigma, hearing loss and multiple hearing health outcomes. Participants randomized to the control group will only complete the survey; participants in the intervention group will be asked to affirm their values. Six months later, all participants will complete the same survey to assess outcomes. Discussion: The proposed research will lead to a brief psychological intervention to reduce stigma in relation to hearing loss/aids.
The main purpose of this study is to measure how much of the study drug gets into the bloodstream and how long it takes the body to eliminate it. This study will involve a single dose of ¹⁴C radiolabelled LY3502970. This means that a radioactive substance will be incorporated into the study drug. The purposes are to investigate the study drug and its breakdown products and to find out how much of these pass from blood into urine and feces. The study will last up to 8 weeks (maximum).
The primary objective is to determine whether advising parents to apply emollient (moisturiser) to their child's skin for the first year of life in addition to best practice infant skin care advice can prevent or delay the onset of eczema in high-risk children, when compared with a control group who are given the best practice infant skin care advice only.
This is an open-label, single-center, two part study in healthy female subjects of non-childbearing potential to investigate the absorption, metabolism, and excretion of [14C]-GDC-9545 (Part 1), the absolute bioavailability of formulations F12 and F18 (i.e., GDC-9545/F12 capsule, 30 mg and GDC-9545/F18 capsule, 30 mg) and relative bioavailability of GDC-9545 oral capsule F18 to the F12 formulation (Part 2). It is planned that Part 1 will begin prior to Part 2 of the study, and that the two parts of the study will partially overlap.
This protocol is for a pragmatic randomised controlled clinical trial (RCT) with a manual spinal mobilisation (MSM) intervention for patients with axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA), embedded in a Trials within Cohort (TwiCs) design. This trial might appear as a standardised RCT but there is a secondary element - an observational cohort the trial is embedded in. Trial A is the first (of possibly several) embedded pragmatic RCTs involving physiotherapy interventions that may identify therapies that will help improve outcomes for patients with axSpA. The investigators are seeking to improve outcomes for these patients by comparing different physiotherapy interventions in subsequent trials with standard of care (SoC) physiotherapy. Trial A will compare routine care vs routine care plus MSM physiotherapy attempting to answer the primary research question if MSM on patients with axSpA improves spinal mobility. In order to recruit patients and obtain outcomes for Trial A (n=70), the investigators will first recruit up to 300 axSpA patients receiving care at the Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases (RNHRD) in Bath into a cohort and observe their standard of care outcomes. This will allow to answer the cohort's research question of "How does SoC physiotherapy in patients with axSpA reflect in data collected routinely on outcomes of the disease?" Patients will be asked to consent to provide routine observational data on their wellbeing, be approached to take part in future trials of interventions which aim to improve outcomes for patients with axSpA, and not be approached unless they are offered the physiotherapy trial intervention. This highly pragmatic method of providing information and seeking consent replicates the informed consent procedures in routine care clinical settings. This study is aimed to last three years, with individual trials of 40-70 participants, ranging between three to six months duration of therapy intervention in addition to routine care.
Examine the impact of the protein supplements leucine, HMB and BCAA on muscle recovery and inflammatory response following acute exercise.