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NCT ID: NCT02178826 Completed - Nocturnal Enuresis Clinical Trials

Nocturnal Enuresis and Rapid Maxillary Expansion

NERME
Start date: January 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Nocturnal enuresis (NE) is the involuntary loss of urine that occurs only at night in children aged 5 years or more. NE is a common problem, affecting about 10% of school children. The prevalence declines with each year of maturity but for some it persists in to adolescents and early adulthood. It can lead to bad self-confidence and low self-esteem, which can have psychosocial consequences. NE is a multifactorial condition. Three central factors have been identified: A) Many bedwetting children produce large amounts of urine at night due to a deficiency of the antidiuretic hormone vasopressin. B) Other children have a lack of inhibition of bladder emptying during sleep. C) Almost all children are deep sleepers with high arousal thresholds. They simply don't wake up when the bladder is full or when it contracts. There are two well established and evidence based treatments today: the bed-wetting alarm and the pharmacologic treatment desmopressin. The alarm emits a sound when the child wets the bed, which conditions the child to wake up or inhibit bladder emptying. This method is curative for about half of the patients who try this, but relapse occurs. Desmopressin is a synthetic analog of arginine vasopressin and works by decreasing the urine volume at night. About half of the patients become dry with this medication but only as long as they take the medicine. To day, at least 25% of all children with NE do not respond to any of the above treatment. Rapid maxillary expansion (RME) is a common orthodontic technique to treat patients with a narrow upper jaw. The brace is fitted by an orthodontist, and has a jack-screw, which is activated twice every day for 10-14 days. The procedure is neither painful nor harmful and is not very visible at all. There are a few reports about children who have become dry after RME treatment. None of them have been randomised or placebo controlled but indicates that quite a few children do become dry after this treatment. A recently carried out study in Sweden show that half of the children became dry after RME treatment. These children were all classed as therapy resistant and had already tried the alarm and medication without success. The reports are intriguing, but invite the question why a brace would help cure NE? It is likely that sleep and respiration is involved. This study will investigate these children's sleep during the treatment. The trial is a randomised, placebo controlled trial.

NCT ID: NCT02178488 Completed - Clinical trials for Vitamin D3 Deficiency

Efficacy Study of Vitamin D Supplementation to Meticillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) Carriers

D-STAPH
Start date: December 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to treat persistent MRSA carriers with vitamin D supplementation during a 12 month to see if the number of MRSA positive patients can be reduced.

NCT ID: NCT02174861 Completed - Clinical trials for Treatment for Prevention of Chronic Migraine

A Study to Assess the Long-term Safety and Efficacy of Erenumab (AMG 334) in Chronic Migraine Prevention.

Start date: June 30, 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To assess the long-term safety and efficacy of erenumab.

NCT ID: NCT02174731 Completed - Anemia Clinical Trials

Safety and Efficacy Study of Roxadustat to Treat Anemia in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease, on Dialysis.

Start date: July 1, 2014
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of roxadustat compared to epoetin alfa for the treatment of anemia in chronic kidney disease patients on dialysis.

NCT ID: NCT02172963 Completed - Clinical trials for Hemorrhagic Cystitis

A Pilot Study Using Placenta Derived Decidual Stromal Cells for Hemorrhagic Cystitis

Start date: November 2011
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy using placenta derived decidual stromal cell therapy for hemorrhagic cystitis after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. It is hypothesized that the decidual stromal cell therapy is safe to infuse and that they have a positive clinical effect.

NCT ID: NCT02172092 Completed - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Fluid Kinetics in Patients With Diabetic Ketoacidosis

FDKA
Start date: August 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose with the study is to follow the fluid shifts that occur during fluid resuscitation of patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. In the study measurements of changes in blood and urine concentrations of Sodium and Chloride as well as blood hemoglobin are used to mathematically calculate changes in distribution volumes of these different endogenous markers.

NCT ID: NCT02171065 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS)

PROSPECT II & PROSPECT ABSORB - an Integrated Natural History Study and Randomized Trial.

P2
Start date: June 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The present study has two components, an overall prospective observational study using multimodality imaging (PROSPECT II) that will examine the natural history of patients with unstable atherosclerotic coronary artery disease with the specific goal to establish the utility of low-risk intracoronary imaging modalities, IVUS and NIRS, to identify plaques prone to future rupture and clinical events. The randomized PROSPECT ABSORB substudy will examine whether treatment of vulnerable plaques with the Absorb Bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) plus GDMT safely increases the minimum lumen area (MLA) at 24 months compared with GDMT alone. The cutoff for inclusion in PROSPECT ABSORB will be a site-determined PB ≥65% (rather than the 70% cutoff identified in the original PROSPECT analysis (Stone et al., New England Journal of Medicine, 2011(5)) to account for an observed tendency for sites to underestimate plaque burden during acute treatment of ACS patients. Nonetheless, in PROSPECT, a core laboratory determined PB ≥65% was also associated with a high (7.0%) rate of major adverse cardiac event (MACE) during 3-year follow-up, a rate which may be reduced with a bioresorbable scaffold.

NCT ID: NCT02167074 Completed - Lymph Nodes Clinical Trials

Comparing a 25G EUS Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) Device With a 20G EUS

ASPRO
Start date: February 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to compare the diagnostic accuracy of two EUS-guided tissue acquisition devices; the 25G Echotip Ultra Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) device and the 20G Echotip ProCore Fine Needle Biopsy (FNB) device.

NCT ID: NCT02166996 Completed - Cutaneous Tumors Clinical Trials

A Prospective Comparison of Suture Removal Time for Simple Surgical Defects of the Head and Neck

Start date: April 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A single-center, prospective, randomized comparison with blinded assessment of cosmetic outcome. To compare cosmetic outcome of surgical defects of head and neck, repaired with non-resorbable monofilament sutures from the aspect of suture removal time 7 and 14 days. Data are gathered through a standardized form at the time of surgery concerning width and length of the surgical excisions, and if the patient has any systemic cortisone treatment or diabetes mellitus. At the time of surgery the patients are randomised to a suture time at 7 or 14 days postoperatively and all receive the same written information about postoperative care and restrictions. Photographs of the scars are taken one month and one year after the procedure and rated using a visual analogue scale (VAS) by three independent assessors blinded to the intervention and suture time. The width of the scar is measured after one ear. Study hypothesis is that leaving non-resorbable monofilament sutures in clean surgical wounds in the head and neck area for up to 14 days does not lead to poor cosmetic outcome.

NCT ID: NCT02166840 Completed - Clinical trials for Obstructive Jaundice

Metal or Plastic Stents to Relieve Obstruction of Obstructive Jaundice Prior to Resection of Periampullary Tumors.

SEMS
Start date: March 2007
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Patients with obstructive jaundice due to periampullary tumor can temporarily be relieved of their jaundice with transpapillary stenting at endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography (ERCP) prior to operation. Usually plastic stents are used. Hypothesis: Self expanding metallic stents offer a be a better alternative for preoperative stenting in patients with obstructive jaundice due to periampullary tumour obstruction.