View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:Inpatient, multimodal rehabilitation represents one of the most important interventions in the disease management of post/long COVID. Different professional societies, including the German Society of Pneumology and the European Respiratory Society, recommend rehabilitation intervention to reduce the sequelae of COVID-19. However, from the perspective of science and practice, there are relevant areas that have been insufficiently investigated and are essential for the treatment success of post/long COVID patients: - Differentiation of rehabilitation effects from natural recovery after COVID-19. - Lack of personalized and symptom-based treatment approaches that can address the heterogeneity of symptoms in post/long COVID - Lack of uniform, high-quality rehabilitation standards in post-/long-COVID. Therefore, post-COVID patients will be recruited at several post-COVID practices around Germany and randomized to receive (A) a rehabilitation program or (B) usual care. The primary objective of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to investigate whether a 3-week symptom-oriented, inpatient, multidisciplinary rehabilitation intervention, whose content focus is standardized according to cluster assignment (fatigue, cognition, soma), has a positive effect on the quality of life (primary outcome) in post-COVID syndrome patients compared to a usual care group (standard outpatient care). All study participants will be provided with a continuous telemonitoring system (SaniQ app) throughout the study period. After the interventional phase, there will be a 3 months follow-up assessment to evaluate the maintenance effects of COVID rehabilitation.
The purpose of the study is to explore the potential effectiveness of two common low-dose interventions, one targeting cognitive difficulties and the other targeting affective difficulties on quality of life and cognition in people suffering from long-COVID with cognitive complaints.
The primary objective of the present research is to determine the effectiveness of Family Health Center of San Diego's Long COVID and Fatiguing Illness Recovery Program (LC&FIRP) on clinician- and patient-level outcomes. LC&FIRP is comprised of a teleECHO program focused on multi-specialty case-consultation and peer-to-peer sharing of emerging best practices to support management of complex cases associated with Long COVID, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), and other post-infectious fatiguing illnesses (PIFI). Our secondary objective is to determine the feasibility, acceptability, and sustainability of LC&FIRP. Our findings should provide a fuller understanding of the potential impact of innovative technology enabled multi-disciplinary team-based care models in low-resource, community-based primary care settings.
Purpose of the study: to analyze the interlinks between serum 25(OH)D level and severity of new coronavirus infection (COVID-19) in hospitalized patients, as well as the effect of adding colecaciferol to standard therapy for patients in the acute period of the disease. The study will involve at least 300 hospitalized patients with confirmed COVID-19. All study participants will be twice assessed for serum 25 (OH) D levels: baseline and 8-10 days of hospitalization. Following a baseline examination, patients will be randomized into 2 groups. Group I (No. 1), vitamin D therapy begins with a dosage of 50,000 IU in the first and second weeks. Group II (No. 2), vitamin D therapy is prescribed at a dosage of 2000 IU / day. On 8-10 days of vitamin D supplementation, all participants will be retested for serum 25 (OH) D levels to assess the effectiveness of therapy. On 14-21 days we assessed severity of the course, ICU hospitalization, duration of hospitalization, outcome of the disease, duration of glucocorticoid therapy, the need for specific therapy (inhibitors IL-6), changes in cytokine/chemokine, APPs concentration.
The present prospective cohort study aims to assess factors associated with of one-year health-related quality of life and physical, cognitive and mental health outcomes among adult survivors of hospitalization for COVID-19. Adult patients requiring hospitalization due to COVID-19 disease will be followed through structured and centralized telephone interviews performed at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months after enrollment.
This study aims to investigate the effects of a single dose of psilocybin, delivered in the contextof pre- and post-dose psychotherapy, on symptoms of depression and burnout suffered by healthcare clinicians as a result of frontline work in the COVID pandemic.
The novel coronavirus called severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was discovered for the first time in December 2019 in Wuhan (China) and the disease it causes is called coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Now, this pandemic is rapidly spreading all over the world. Pregnant have higher rates of COVID-19, associated with hospitalizations, and severe in-hospital outcomes. Immune responses may have a potential role in the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of patients with COVID-19. So we need of identifying biomarkers for disease severity and progression.
There is an urgent need to rapidly evaluate anti-Covid 19 vaccination treatments, in terms of immune response (humoral and cell-mediated) together with the verification of the effectiveness of the vaccine in preventing SARS-CoV-2 infection in thalassemic subjects. It is also necessary to increase scientific knowledge in order to improve clinical practice to have presence responses and maintenance extent of the response to vaccinations against encapsulated bacteria carried out previously. The objectives of the main study are: 1. Evaluate the appearance, extent, and duration of humoral response (antibodies) to the anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccine; 2. Assess the incidence of positive cases after vaccination. The objective of the first sub-study is: - Evaluate the appearance, extent, and duration of cellular response (T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes) to the anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccine based on age groups and the presence/absence of hypo/asplenia. The objective of the second sub-study is: - Evaluate the presence and extent of the response to previous vaccinations to encapsulated bacteria.
The purpose of this clinical trial is to compare antibody response and safety of the Covid-19 (recombinante) vaccine according to different time intervals between the first two doses (4, 8 and 12 weeks) and serologic status immediately before the vaccine.
Aim of this project is to understand clinical features, clinical outcomes and efficacy and safety profiles of different therapies by analyzing a cohort of COVID-19 patients hospitalized and treated in a tertiary-level institution, University hospital Dubrava. Patients' clinical and laboratory characteristics, drug exposure and outcomes are obtained by analysis of written and electronical medical records.