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.
This study builds on the tested and refined HEART Camp intervention which has been shown to improve long-term adherence to exercise in individuals diagnosed with heart failure. HEART Camp Connect enhances HEART Camp by delivering the coaching via videoconference and providing access to hospital-based exercise facilities and online exercise programming. This prospective study uses a 2-group, randomized repeated measures experimental design with 3 data collection points baseline, Month 3, and Month 6.
Resistance exercise may immediately lessen the perception of pain. The purpose of this study is compare the effects of an upper body exercise to a lower body exercise on the perception of pain (pressure pain threshold).
The aim of the retrospective study is to characterize the molecular mechanisms responsible for the effect of statins and evolocumab in patients with stable coronary artery disease. The research team will retrieve and review intravascular imaging and gene expression data previously collected in the catheterization laboratory during the following time-period: 8/1/2013-4/14/2015 and 5/4/2021 - 10/28/2022.
The goal of this clinical trial is to develop and test how reminiscence offered by trained young adult volunteers using a digital storytelling (DST) platform may help older persons with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) to improve their social and emotional well-being. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Whether is this reminiscence and DST based intervention effective in improving social and emotional well-being of older adults with ADRD? 2. Whether do young adult participants improve their social and emotional well-being as well as knowledge and attitudes towards aging after participating this study? Older adult participants in the intervention group will receive 6 sessions of life-review with young adult volunteers and create a DST based on their life review discussion in the last 4 weeks. Older adult participants in the social wellness control group will receive 6 sessions of general talks with young adults and create a non-digital scrapbook or journal at week 7-10. Researchers will compare these two groups to see if participants in the intervention group benefit more on their well-being.
This was a retrospective real-world evidence cohort study.
This study will be conducted in three parts: Part 1 will be a Single Ascending Dose (SAD), Part 2 will be a Multiple Ascending Dose (MAD), and Part 3 will be a selected SAD cohort in a fed state. Safety will be assessed by periodic measurement of vital signs, physical examinations, electrocardiograms, blood laboratory analyses and occurrence of adverse events (AE).
Individuals who suffer from a stroke, cardiac arrest, or traumatic bleeding (hemorrhage) injuries often have compromised blood flow and oxygen to the brain which can lead to the death of brain cells, and if the patient survives, subsequent difficulty in thinking and performing tasks of daily living. Traditionally, delivery of a constant flow of blood to the brain has been thought to be the most important factor for the survival of brain cells. In this study, a novel intervention will be assessed called "pulsatile perfusion therapy", delivering blood flow in a slow pulsing pattern. It is anticipated this intervention will improve brain blood flow and oxygenation during these serious clinical events. There is a specific interest in whether delivery of brain blood flow with a slow pulsatile pattern will improve oxygenation of brain tissue, particularly when the brain is challenged under low oxygen (hypoxia) and low volume (hypovolemia) conditions, simulating stroke, cardiac arrest, and hemorrhage. A technique called oscillatory lower body negative pressure (OLBNP) will be used in healthy human participants, facilitating delivery of blood flow to the brain with different pulsing patterns. This technique will allow for determination of the ideal pattern of brain blood flow that improves oxygenation of the brain tissue. Measurements will be made of substances in the blood that may be released with pulsatile flow which act on the blood vessels to increase flow and delivery of oxygen.
This was a retrospective observational study of patients with advanced breast cancer (BC). This non-interventional study was conducted using discrete structured data and medical record abstraction, if needed, from patients treated at Texas Oncology, the designated research organization and a community oncology practice. The first date of a new diagnosis of advanced BC (de novo or progressed to advanced BC) defined the study index date. To allow for an adequate potential duration of follow-up (retrospectively observed) after the index date over which PIK3CA testing and treatment patterns was observed, a minimum follow-up opportunity of 6 months after the diagnosis of advanced BC at the time of data pull and/or abstraction was required.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the excretion pathway of orally administered [14C]-BMS-986196 and to assess the safety and tolerability of orally administered BMS-986196.
This research study is examining multiple doses of voxelotor (a study drug intended for treatment of sickle cell disease) and how it interacts with additional substrates (substrates are drugs or other substances that are metabolized by cytochrome enzymes. The substrates used in this study are FDA approved medications). The study will help to determine the safety and tolerability of the study drugs taken together, as well as the pharmacokinetics (PK) on how your body processes and responds to the combination of the study drug and substrates. Although these drugs are FDA approved, their use in this study is experimental.