There are about 173942 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in United States. 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.
Evaluate the feasibility of administering plasma (PF24) acquired from donors of a young chronological age intravenously to older adults at WFBMC while also exploring its effects on age-related functional decline
To find out if the use of an intranasal tear neurostimulator (ITN), may be useful in decreasing the pain symptoms felt by patients who experience contact lens discomfort.
The objective of this clinical study is to collect additional data on the safety and effectiveness of the EPi- Sense®-AF Guided Coagulation System with VisiTrax® to treat symptomatic persistent or long-standing persistent Atrial Fibrillation (AF) patients who are refractory or intolerant to at least one Class I and/or III AAD.
To investigate the effectiveness and tolerability of a second maintenance treatment in participants with platinum-sensitivity relapsed (PSR) epithelial ovarian cancer, who have previously received PARPi maintenance treatment and who have benefit (complete response [CR] or partial response [PR]) or stable disease (SD) from further platinum based chemotherapy.
To assess and compare the quality of sleep self- reported by veterans with sleep disorders before and after use of the Chilipad cooling mattress pad
Hepatitis C (HCV) is a chronic infection with significant morbidity and mortality. The development of directly acting antivirals (DAA) has dramatically improved the cure rate of HCV treatment. People who experience incarceration are disproportionately infected and often involved in ongoing transmission of disease. However, despite availability of effective treatment, people who experience incarceration are often unable to access this curative therapy, and are often not readily engaged in medical care upon release. This perpetuates transmission and progression of disease in an incredibly high risk, marginalized population. Therefore, in order to effectively eliminate HCV, it is imperative that the epidemic of HCV in prisons is addressed, and that models of care are established for treatment of HCV in incarcerated individuals, both during and after incarceration. As such, the investigators propose a comprehensive model of care to engage incarcerated individuals in treatment of HCV upon release from prison. This care is provided in conjunction with collocated services to prevent HCV reinfection, including opioid agonist therapy. This pilot trial will demonstrate whether a comprehensive model of care can effectively cure HCV in recently incarcerated individuals, while simultaneously treating opioid use disorder and preventing HCV reinfection.
The study aims to examine the effect of buprenorphine on suicidal ideation in individuals with opioid use disorder, and to investigate the functional brain activity related to its potential anti-suicidal effect.
The Assessment of Intravenous Rate Control Response in Atrial Fibrillation Trial Pilot Study (AIRCRAFT Pilot) is a prospective, unblinded, pragmatic, cluster-level allocation trial. AIRCRAFT compares two medication classes commonly used for rate control in patients in atrial fibrillation (AF) with rapid ventricular rate (RVR). The purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate the feasibility and approach to conducting a trial that compares the use of IV beta blockers and IV calcium channel blockers for patients in AF with RVR in the medical intensive care unit (MICU). AF with RVR is considered when the following parameters are met: (1) Cardiac rhythm consistent with AF (2) Heart rate > 110 bpm. AF with RVR recurrence after conversion to sinus rhythm or prior rate control will count as a new episode of AF with RVR. Rate control agents will be pseudo-randomized to each of the three different MICU teams (beta-blocker, calcium channel blocker and physician preference). Patients are admitted to the three MICU teams on a rotating basis which will allow for pseudo-randomization, the effects of which will be equal between the three teams. Patients will be enrolled in the study if they develop AF with RVR and will be followed until discharge from the MICU. This study aims to assess the adherence and fidelity to treatment assignments in the current novel pilot study protocol which will help inform the feasibility of a larger-scale efficacy trial between IV beta blockers and IV calcium channel blockers for initial management of AF with RVR. Assessment of adherence and fidelity to treatment assignments in management of AF with RVR in the MICU will help inform power calculations and the percent of patients in each study group that received the assigned class of medication will help inform feasibility. Additional aims include assessment of time from medication administration to rate control or sinus conversion as well as identifying optimal means of data extraction (manual vs automated), and incidence of adverse events including hypotension and bradycardia.
The regulation of total body water that defines human hydration status is a complex and dynamic process. Current methods of assessing hydration status (e.g. hematologic and urinary analyses) lack the ability to track changes in hydration status in real-time due to whole-body homeostatic physiologic processes required to maintain central pressure and cardiovascular function. This project will address this problem by assessing the relationship between autonomic function (measured using heart rate variability), a brain-derived process that regulates cardiovascular function, and changes in the hydration-mediated hormone vasopressin.
The long-term goal of this research is to re-engineer clinical decision-making for older adults with multiple chronic conditions (MCC) to focus on patients' self-identified health priorities. The overall objective of this study is to implement and evaluate an intervention called Patient Priorities Care (PPC) intervention with 20 primary care clinicians in North Carolina (NC), using a hybrid effectiveness-implementation design. Guided by the Minimally Disruptive Medicine model, the central hypothesis is that clinical decision-making guided by patients' priorities will result in less burdensome care for patients and their families, increase patient goal setting, facilitate patient-provider shared decision-making, and improve patient quality of life and satisfaction with care. As the prevalence, costs, and treatment burden of MCC continue to rise, new approaches to care are urgently needed in this growing population. Findings from this study will inform practical approaches for aligning clinical decision-making in older adults with MCC with their health priorities.