There are about 21062 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Italy. 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.
Patients undergone to axillary dissection during breast surgery with a PECS I, II block will be randomized to receive either a serratus plane continuous local anesthetic infusion through a multiple hole catheter or nothing. Both groups will receive a patient controlled analgesia with morphine.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a single treatment with administration of 400 Units NT 201 (botulinum toxin) is superior to placebo (no medicine) for the treatment of lower limb spasticity caused by stroke or traumatic brain injury (Main Period). Participants will be assigned to the treatment groups by chance and neither the participants nor the research staff who interact with them will know the allocation. The following 4 to 5 treatment cycles will investigate the safety and tolerability of treatment with NT 201 (botulinum toxin) when administered in doses between 400 and 800 Units (Open Label Extension Period). All participants will receive the treatment and the dose will depend on whether only lower limb spasticity or combined upper and lower limb spasticity are treated.
Aim of this study is to evaluate Daratumumab effect on MRD-positive patients with Multiple Myeloma (MM) who achieved >VGPR after any therapy (ASCT, VMP, Rev-Dex). Daratumumab 16 mg/kg administered at weekly intervals for 8 weeks, then every 2 weeks for an additional 16 weeks, will be given to 50 MM patients who achieved a >VGPR defined by monoclonal component disappearance in serum or urine, immunofixation positive/negative and MRD-positivity (by NGF). Free light chain (FLC) and CT/PET will be evaluated at time 0. NGF will be done on marrow aspirate at time 0, at 2 months and every 6 months for 2 years. If patients will be still MRD positive after 6 months of therapy , treatment will be continued up to 2 years. If MRD negative by NGF, the patients can stop the treatment.
RATIONALE OF THE OBSERVATION STUDY: This study aims to observe which patients with temporomandibular disorder improve more following a physiotherapy program of four sessions. Knowing the characteristics of patients who have the most significant improvements could help clinician advise or advise against physiotherapy for the treatment of temporomandibular disorders. STUDY PROCEDURES The study will be conducted at the Istituto Stomatologico Italiano. Patients diagnosed with Temporomandibular Disorder will be recruited in the gnathological and neuromuscular gnathological departments. The physiotherapists of the Craniomandibular Physiotherapy Service will perform physiotherapy therapy, which consists of four physiotherapy sessions [lasting 30 minutes, about once a week] over a month. Before starting the treatment, participants will be asked to answer some questions concerning their state of health (e.g. pain intensity) with particular reference to Temporomandibular Disorder (e.g. location and duration of pain). The intensity of pain and the level of function will then be monitored at baseline, after 4 weeks and after 8 weeks from baseline. EXPECTED BENEFITS FROM THE STUDY AND EXPECTED BENEFITS FOR THE PATIENT The benefits are the discovery of new knowledge in the field of therapeutic choice for patients with temporomandibular disorder.
Around 20% of the patients requiring hospitalization for Acute Exacerbation of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (AECOPD) develop hypercapnia, which is associated with an increased risk of death. Once Non Invasive Ventilation (NIV) has been initiated, a reduction in Respiratory Rate (RR) and improvement in pH within 4 h predicts NIV success. If pH <7.25 and RR >35 breath per minutes persist, NIV failure is likely. Worsening acidosis, after initial improvement with NIV, is also associated with a worse prognosis. In addition, it has been shown that delaying intubation in patients at high risk for NIV failure has a negative impact on patient survival. Hence, assessing the risk of NIV failure is extremely important. NIV has some limitations: a) intolerance, discomfort and claustrophobia requiring frequent interruptions; b) poor patient-ventilator synchrony, especially in presence of air leaks or high ventilatory requirements. Since removing carbon dioxide by means of an artificial lung reduces the minute ventilation required to maintain an acceptable arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2), the investigators hypothesize that applying Extra-Corporeal CO2 Removal (ECCO2R) in high-risk AECOPD patients may reduce the incidence of NIV failure and improve patient-ventilator interaction. After the beginning of ECCO2R, NIV could be gradually replaced by High Flow Nasal Cannula Oxygen Therapy (HFNCOT), potentially reducing the risk of ventilator induced lung injury, improving patient's comfort and probably allowing the adoption of a more physiologically "noisy" pattern of spontaneous breathing.
VR-NECKPAIN is a two-arm, monocentric, single-blind, randomized controlled trial in Neck Pain patients. The entire treatment consist in 12 sessions, each during 45 minutes, twice a week for 6 consecutive weeks. Subjects will be evaluated ad baseline (T0) and after six weeks of rehabilitation (T1). There will also be a 3 months Follow-Up assessment (T2). The total duration of study participation for each subject will be approximately 19 weeks, including evaluation at T0, treatment and evaluation at T1 and T2. Individuals in the experimental group (VRT) will undergo a virtual reality-based sensorimotor rehabilitation. Control group (CT) subjects will undergo the same rehabilitation of VR subjects, in terms of intensity, time and type, but with the virtual reality turned off.
Hypertension is the major risk factor for vascular cognitive impairment (VCI). One of the main limitations in the clinical approach to VCI is that, by the time that it is manifested, it might be too late to reverse the neurodegenerative process. Thus, early identification of predictive signs of later dementia is demanding for management of hypertensive patients (HT).This aim claims for new methods that compute in a cloud all possible data sources coming from patients (brain imaging, cognitive profile, clinical data), to extract discriminative aggregate biomarkers. Thus, this study aims at: 1) characterizing the predictive potential of an aggregate biomarker for dementia in HT, based on brain imaging, clinical and cognitive assessment; 2) evaluating the impact of blood pressure variability, besides systolic/diastolic blood pressure, on the progression of the aggregate biomarker; 3) assessing whether specific classes of antihypertensive drugs differently affect the progression of the aggregate biomarker. In order to do this, this study proposes to evaluate advanced brain imaging and cognitive profile in a cohort of hypertensive patients, at baseline and after a 1 year follow up, to identify an innovative signature for the development of cognitive dysfunction in hypertension. In particular, the effects of blood pressure variability and of different classes of antihypertensive drugs will be evaluated.
Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) is a monogenic autosomal dominant disease also known as Autosomal Dominant Hypercholesterolemia - ADH) that leads to dramatically increased levels of Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL) and total cholesterol associated to tendon xanthomas, xanthelasma, corneal arcus, premature atherosclerosis and to an increased risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) and myocardial infarction. FH is mainly caused by mutations in genes encoding for proteins affecting hepatic LDL cholesterol uptake including the LDL receptor (LDLR) gene or the gene encoding the only apolipoprotein of LDL, the apolipoprotein B (APOB), or the gene encoding a protease regulating LDLR levels on the cell membrane Lysosomal Acid Lipase A (LIPA) gene encode for Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) enzyme responsible for hydrolyzing cholesterol esters and triglycerides that are delivered to lysosomes. Mutations in LIPA that completely inactivate LAL are the molecular cause of Wolman disease, a rapidly lethal disease of infancy while mutations in LIPA that result in residual enzymatic activity of LAL are responsible of a disorder characterized by a less severe phenotype known as cholesterol ester storage disease (CESD). Patients with CESD usually show a phenotype characterized by hepatic disease and mixed hyperlipidemia with elevated levels of LDL-C and triglycerides (TG) and decreased HDL-C levels. A broader phenotypic presentation for loss of function mutations in LIPA suggests that LIPA mutations may be considered in patients with apparently monogenic FH in whom mutations in the known candidate genes are not detectable. The project is aimed to evaluate the prevalence and the mutation rate of LIPA gene in subjects with a clinical diagnosis of FH and already genetically characterized in whom pathogenic mutations in the known candidate genes have not been identified. The analysis will be performed in about 250 FH pediatric subjects and putative causal mutations will be also tested for co-segregation in available families in affected and unaffected members.
The aim of this prospective observational study is to evaluate the efficacy of Bonfils fiberoptic stylet to perform tracheal intubation with double lumen tube after failure of standard laryngoscopy in 30 adults patients scheduled for elective thoracic surgery, who require tracheal intubation with double lumen tube for One Lung Ventilation under general anesthesia in a teaching hospital operating theatre at Ospedali Riuniti Ancona (Italy).
Focus of this project is to evaluate the possible financial benefit resulting from an optimization of surgical outcomes throughout a collaborative and systematic auditing activity.The primary objective of this analysis is to assess the employed resources by National Health System related to surgical activities for primary colorectal cancer during a collaborative and systematic auditing activity in 8 Surgical Units of Emilia-Romagna