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NCT ID: NCT04569591 Not yet recruiting - Pituitary Adenoma Clinical Trials

Corticotrophin-releasing Hormone (CRH) Stimulation for 18F-FDG-PET Detection of Pituitary Adenoma in Cushing s Disease

Start date: June 26, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Cushing s disease is caused by a pituitary gland tumor. Patients with Cushing s disease suffer obesity, diabetes, osteoporosis, weakness, and hypertension. The cure is surgery to remove the pituitary tumor. Currently, MRI is the best way to find these tumors. But not all tumors can be seen with an MRI. Researchers hope giving the hormone CRH before a PET scan can help make these tumors more visible. Objective: To test whether giving CRH before a PET scan will help find pituitary gland tumors that might be causing Cushing s disease. Eligibility: People ages 8 and older with Cushing s disease that is caused by a pituitary gland tumor that cannot be reliably seen on MRI Design: Participants will be screened with their medical history, a physical exam, an MRI, and blood tests. Participants will have at least one hospital visit. During their time in the hospital, they will have a physical exam and a neurological exam. They will have a PET scan of the brain. A thin plastic tube will be inserted into an arm vein. A small amount of radioactive sugar and CRH will be injected through the tube. Participants will lie in a darkened room for about an hour and be asked to urinate. Then they will lie inside the scanner for about 40 minutes. After the scan, they will be asked to urinate every 2-3 hours for the rest of the day. Blood will be drawn through a needle in the arm. Participants will have surgery to remove their tumor within 3 months after the scan. Participants will then continue regular follow-up in the clinic.

NCT ID: NCT04569461 Not yet recruiting - Prostate Cancer Clinical Trials

Trimodality Approach of Low Dose iOnizing Radiation With or Without Neoadjuvant Pembrolizumab and Prostatectomy for Men With Intermediate/High Risk Prostate Cancer (TALON)

TALON
Start date: July 1, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will enroll prostate cancer patients with an unfavorable diagnosis. Subjects will receive a combination of pembrolizumab, Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) to the prostate, and short-term androgen deprivation therapy (STADT or Short-term ADT). After receiving this "trimodal therapy", subjects will undergo a radical prostatectomy. The prostate tissue will be analyzed for differences in pathology and local immune cell infiltration, and subjects will be followed for 2 years to watch for prostate specific antigen (PSA) recurrence. The PSA results will be analyzed by comparing them to historical controls that have already been published, to learn if this therapy approach delays PSA rise.

NCT ID: NCT04568837 Not yet recruiting - Spine Fusion Clinical Trials

Steroids After Spine Fusion Surgery

Start date: March 1, 2025
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This trial studies how well low-dose postoperative corticosteroids (FDA approved) affect patient outcomes (patient reported outcomes, pain medication use, length of stay, major complications, and time to first bowel movement) after thoracic and/or lumbar spine fusion surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04567797 Not yet recruiting - Healthy Clinical Trials

Assessing the Efficacy of Passive Exoskeletons for Construction Work: Lab-Based Study

Start date: October 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to assess the effectiveness and acceptability of four types of commercial Back support exoskeletons (BSEs) for concrete work tasks. BSEs are external wearable devices designed to reduce physical demands on the back by providing assistive moments to body joints to support muscles. There is considerable evidence to suggest such exoskeletons reduce the risks of back injuries for workers performing repetitive tasks. However, since the effects of using BSEs in concrete work tasks are still unknown, evidence-based information regarding effectiveness, productivity impact, and safety risks is required to help industries adopt BSEs as an ergonomic intervention.

NCT ID: NCT04559737 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)

CPAP Population Management

Start date: July 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose a study to formally compare two Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) follow-up pathways: 1) Usual care - follow-up visits reflect standard care practice and we rely on patients to reach out to us if they are struggling with therapy (there will be no active outreach); 2) Case Management - in addition to "Usual Care" visits, patients CPAP use will be monitored and further encounters may be initiated with "struggler" CPAP users while "successful" users are passively followed. The investigators will evaluate measures of CPAP adherence, patient engagement and cost-effectiveness for the duration of 1 year. Our hypothesis is that "Case Management" will improve CPAP adherence and cost-effectiveness compared to "Usual Care". The investigators also hypothesize that targeting "strugglers" only in a management by exception (MBE) approach will be equally effective, but require less personnel time compared to targeting "all" patients.

NCT ID: NCT04556227 Not yet recruiting - Delirium Clinical Trials

Simultaneous Recumbent Cycling and Cognitive Training

Start date: January 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Intensive care units (ICU) provide life-saving care for nearly five million people annually. Up to 80% of patients receiving care in an ICU experience at least one episode of delirium. Delirium, an acute episodic display of confused thinking and unawareness, predicts impaired cognition and accelerated cognitive decline which negatively impacts quality of life (QOL) long after hospital discharge. The average age of ICU patients is 52 years. These middle-age (MA) ICU survivors need cognitive interventions that are well planned, accessible, and effective to improve cognition and prevent accelerated decline so they can resume their previous QOL and enter older age with optimized cognitive function. Physical exercise and cognitive training independently improve cognition and emerging evidence indicates that combining these two approaches produces even greater effects on cognition. Community-based rehabilitation centers are accessible for MAICU survivors to engage in physical activity; cognitive training could easily be added. Approaches in which a patient engages in physical exercise and cognitive training concurrently is an understudied intervention for all ICU survivors, especially those who are middle-aged. Study aims are to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of a simultaneous recumbent cycling and cognitive training intervention (SRCCT) for MAICU survivors who experienced at least one delirium episode during their ICU stay. Feasibility will be determined by systematically evaluating research team training, participant recruitment, randomization, implementation, and intervention fidelity. Acceptability will be evaluated via a satisfaction, preferences, burden, and participant-suggested improvements survey. The SRCCT effect sizes will be calculated comparing multiple data point cognition scores between an SRCCT group and a usual care control group. Upon completion, investigators expect to understand the feasibility and acceptability of the SRCCT delivered in community-based rehabilitation centers, and the combined effect of SRCCT on cognition and QOL for middle-aged ICU survivors who experienced an episode of ICU delirium. The hypothesis is that study participants who engage in physical exercise and cognitive training concurrently will have a greater improvement in cognition and QOL than physical exercise training alone.

NCT ID: NCT04548453 Not yet recruiting - Pregnancy Related Clinical Trials

Establish the uSI Values and End-user Training Material That Will be Used to Guide Oxytocin Dosing Actions

uSI-ranges
Start date: April 2021
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Patients receiving oxytocin for induction or augmentation of labor will be studied with uterine EMG. The results of the EMG will be converted to an oxytocin-associated uterine stimulation index (uSI), which is intended to guide decisions for changing the dose of oxytocin. An expert panel will review the results of the oxytocin dosing actions, then assigned optimized actions throughout the labor. The uSI will be correlated with the optimal dosing actions.

NCT ID: NCT04547179 Not yet recruiting - Migraine Clinical Trials

Medicinal vs. Orthotic Comparison for Migraine Prevention: A Double-Blind Study

Start date: February 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To understand the impacts of using a fixed orthotic facial exercise appliance (BLAfit®) for migraine reduction, as compared to medication (fremanezumab-vfrm) and control.

NCT ID: NCT04537676 Not yet recruiting - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Patient Empowerment Study

Start date: September 15, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Patient Empowerment Study is an observational longitudinal study among adults with diabetic foot ulcer (DFU). The scope of this study is to better understand how a patient's DFU disease process and usage of the Podimetrics System can impact patient health-related quality of life. Health-related quality of life will be measured by both the generic 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) questionnaire and the ulcer-specific Diabetic Foot Ulcer Scale Short Form (DFS-SF) questionnaire.

NCT ID: NCT04533984 Not yet recruiting - Stress Fracture Clinical Trials

Fracture Recovery for Returning to Duty (Teriparatide STRONG)

Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

FORTEO (teriparatide [rDNA origin]; Eli-Lilly, Indiana, USA) is an injectable synthetic recombinant human parathyroid hormone analog that is commonly used to treat people with osteoporosis. In the current investigation this drug will be tested to evaluate its efficacy to accelerate bone healing and decrease the convalescence time of US Army Basic Trainees who have sustained a diaphyseal tibial stress fracture (DTSF). Investigators from the University of South Carolina will collaborate with military personnel to perform a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study at Fort Jackson, SC.