There are about 8563 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Sweden. 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.
This study will evaluate the effect of Burst spinal cord stimulation (SCS) in the treatment of painful radiculopathy in lower extremity(ies) with or without lower back pain. It is a multicenter double-blinded "n-of-1" RCT with repeated two-week periods of Burst SCS or sham in randomised order.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of a digital, person-centered stroke prevention program with a focus on primary prevention. The program is aiming to enable lifestyle change and to promote healthy activity patterns to decrease risk factors for stroke and in that way prevent future stroke.
Abstract Background - Closed suction drain is typically used worldwide after instrumented posterior spinal fusion for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Postoperative drain leakage has been associated with up to 50% of total blood loss in these patients. Previous studies on adult patients with degenerative lumbar spine disorders have shown that leaving out subfascial drain does not increase the risk of deep wound infection or epidural hematoma. However, there has been no studies evaluating the need for subfascial drain in adolescents undergoing instrumented spinal fusion for idiopathic scoliosis. Study Design - A randomized, multicenter clinical trial on children and adolescents undergoing posterior spinal fusion for idiopathic scoliosis using pedicle screw technique. Ninety consecutive adolescents will be randomized into drain vs. no drain group at the time of wound closure using the sealed envelope technique (1:1). Aims and hypothesis - To compare drain vs. no drain use groups for the change in postoperative hemoglobin or hematocrit in children undergoing posterior spinal fusion for AIS. We hypothesize that postoperative hemoglobin change will be larger in the group receiving subfascial drain and there will no change in the risk of postoperative complications (deep surgical site infection, need for hematoma evacuation or other re-operation) between the study groups. Inclusion criteria - Adolescents (aged 10 to 21 years of age) undergoing surgery for idiopathic scoliosis using pedicle screw technique. Exclusion criteria - Coagulation disorder, smoking, unwilling to consent, vertebral column resection, need for anteroposterior surgery. Main outcome parametres - Postoperative change in hemoglobin or hematocrit; Secondary parametres: need for blood transfusion, need for re-operation, need for change in the dressings. Ethical aspects - Ethical committee approval will be obtained both in Finland and in Sweden. An informed consent will be obtained from all children and their parents. In case of major intraoperative blood loss (>50% of blood volume) a subfascial drain can be inserted based on the decision of the treating physician. Time schedule and budget - This study will be started after ethical committee approval (estimated 10/2018). There will be no extra costs as all information gathered will be part of normal surgical treatment of AIS. A part-time research nurse has been hired to take care of data collection into the database.
This is a phase 3 double-blind randomized study to study the efficacy and safety of intravenous ATB200 Co-administered with oral AT2221 in adult subjects with Late Onset Pompe Disease compared with Alglucosidase Alfa/placebo.
The butyrate-producing bacterium Faecalibacterium prausnitzii is abundant in the human bowel and can make up to 5% of the gastrointestinal flora in healthy individuals. A reduced presence of it has been associated with an imbalance in the gastrointestinal flora of metabolic syndromes such as type 2 diabetes, fat liver, and in inflammatory bowel disease. The present double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study is designed to investigate if dietary supplementation with F.prausnitzii (combined with D. piger) once a day for 8 consecutive weeks is tolerated compared to placebo and if it can affect the metabolism in a positive way.
This is a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled, multicenter, exploratory Phase 2 study including participants with Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF), investigating GLPG1205 in addition to the local standard of care (defined as receiving nintedanib, pirfenidone, or neither nintedanib nor pirfenidone).
Patients admitted to internal medicine care environments have complex care needs and must be treated as persons with resources and responsibilities. Person-centred care is defined as care in which the caregiver aims to get to know the patient as a person, and the care comprises a holistic approach to assess patients' needs and resources. There is strong motivation for future health care to transform into an approach that acknowledges and endorses every patient's resources, interests and needs. There is limited existing research on the benefit of implementing person-centred care in internal medicine care environments for all patients regardless of diagnosis or care pathway. Little is known about the effects of person-centred inpatient care on patients' satisfaction with care. This study includes adult patients admitted to an internal medicine inpatient unit regardless of reason for admission. The aim of the study is to evaluate effects of person-centred inpatient care on care processes, in terms of satisfaction with care and person-centred content in medical records and to evaluate effects on self-reported health and self-efficacy.
Group cognitive behavioral therapy for Gambling Disorder (GD) with a focus on emotion regulation - A pilot study This pilot study will evaluate the feasibility and possible effectiveness of a novel treatment protocol developed within the research group including emotion regulation techniques for the treatment of GD.
The Carry Life UF device performs peritoneal ultrafiltration by adding a concentrated glucose to peritoneal dialysis fluid which has been instilled into the abdomen prior to the connection of the device. Maintaining the glucose concentration in the intraperitoneal fluid results in an increased fluid removal (ultrafiltration). The clinical investigation will evaluate the ultrafiltration achieved with the Carry Life UF device compared to standard peritoneal dialysis (PD) therapy
Autism is a diagnosis with certain criteria, especially social and communicative disabilities. Several body functions may be affected to create these disabilities, such as lack of ability to understand that other people think or feel differently than the person with autism, difficulty to experience bodily signals or deviant function of sensory modalities. Several theories describe that our physical, physiological, psychological and existential being can not be separated from each other. The combination of described difficulties in autism makes the perception of the surrounding world or the people within it difficult to understand or interpret, i.e., lack of a sense of coherence. The inner experience of the person as well as the expression of his/her movement qualities will be the effects. There are physiotherapeutic intervention techniques of body awareness, with the purpose to increase the connection to the body and to work with more functional movements. Instead of working with improving the well-being by cognitive top-down techniques, body awareness techniques work bottom-up. The hypothesis is that an intervention with body awareness therapy will increase the possibility for persons with autism to improve movement quality, and increase contact with bodily signals. It will give a better chance to understand and interpret the world and people in different context, conquering a sense of coherence. The study include at least 40 participants with autism randomized to two groups: 1.) intervention once a week for 12 weeks and 2. ) a control group (who will be invited to the therapy after ending study participation). They will be recruited from patient records in habilitation care. The criteria are: having autism, being 15-30 years, not having an intellectual impairment and not having a severe depression. The participants are to have been assessed with the standardized "Basic Body Awareness Scale Movement Quality and Experience", BAS MQ-E, and been found to being relevant participants for body awareness intervention in regard to the expressed individual health problem. Two assessments will be used. The primary one addresses each participants´s individual health problem, using a visual 11-graded scale (NRS), grading the present experience of the health problem. The secondary one is BAS MQ-E. The assessments will be administered as follows: i) prior to; NRS + BAS MQ-E, ii) after 7 occasions; NRS and iii) maximum 2 months after intervention; NRS + BAS MQ-E.