View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of Omicron BA.4/5-Delta strain recombinant novel coronavirus protein vaccine (CHO cells) after vaccination in people aged 18 and over. It is planned to screen 100 subjects who are 18 years old and above and more than 6 months since the last new coronavirus infection or new coronavirus vaccine. All subjects collected venous blood before vaccination, 14 days, 3 months, and 6 months after vaccination for immunological detection of neutralizing antibody of the new coronavirus prototype strain, Delta strain and Omicron strain (BA.4/5, XBB); All adverse events (AEs) within 30 minutes after vaccination, all AEs (including solicited and non-solicited AEs) on days 0-7, all AEs (non-solicited AEs) on days 8-30, and all AEs within 12 months after vaccination were collected. serious adverse events (SAE) and adverse events of special interest (AESI).
The coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), defined by the reporting of pneumonia cases of unknown etiology at the end of 2019 in Wuhan, China, has spread worldwide, causing millions of deaths. Despite the fact that more than two years have passed since the struggle against the disease it continues to be an important public health problem.The increasing number of critically ill patients with this pandemic caused a great demand for intensive care units (ICU), and ICU capacity and staff had to be rapidly expanded in many countries. Similarly, in various periods of the pandemic in Turkey, the capacity of many ICUs had to be increased. The rates of admission to the ICU and death rates differed greatly from center to center due to various factors such as ICU bed capacity and the duration of access to the ICU, patient characteristics, and differences in the treatments applied. Determining the factors that may be associated with mortality is important in terms of improving the ICU follow-up of patients with COVID-19 and guiding their treatment.There is limited information about the characteristics and mortality of Turkish patients with COVID-19 in the ICU. The aim of this study is to determine the demographic, clinical and laboratory characteristics and the factors affecting ICU mortality in COVID-19 patients followed in Akdeniz University Medical Faculty Hospital since the beginning of the pandemic.
Retrospective cohort study that will include patients from the ICU of the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau in Barcelona during the period between March 11 and May 13, 2020. The cohorts are made up of two groups of patients admitted for severe COVID during the first wave, according to whether or not they received physiotherapy and the possible impact of physiotherapy on the days of mechanical ventilation in the two study groups will be studied.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of repurposed medications (study drug(s) in reducing symptoms of non-hospitalized participants with mild to moderate COVID-19. Participants will receive either study drug or placebo. Participants will self-report any new or worsening symptoms or medical events experienced while taking study drug or placebo. This study is intended to be all remote with no in person visits, unless the study team feels it is in the best interest of a participant to be seen in person. Prior and current drug arms are listed on clinicaltrials.gov and will be updated with the activation of any new drug arms. Each study arm will also have its own clinicaltrials.gov entry and will include "Pro00107921" in the Unique Protocol ID.
Covid-19 is a disease where both clinical experience and thus knowledge about the long-term effects of the disease are currently sparse. However, current follow-up results indicate a more pronounced cognitive and respiratory impairment than previously seen in a normal ICU population. As we know that the prevalence of impairments in neurocognitive and Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) is increased in a majority of ICU patients, it would be of benefit to gain knowledge about the impact on the recovery trajectory for patients treated for Covid-19, and to increase the understanding of which factors that affect the HRQoL and recovery and in what way these differs between patients treated in ICU for Covid-19 and other causes respectively. This can contribute to better structures for follow-up and possibility to individualisation that better address which patients are in risk for decreased HRQoL and where benefit for the patient, health care and social economic can be achieved.
Post-Covid(PoC)-patients with fatigue symptoms respond very differently to physical rehabilitation programs. While PoC-patients with psychological symptoms benefit little from physical interventions, fatigue and exercise capacity improves significantly without the presence of psychological symptoms. RCT studies on effects of psychotherapy or the combination of phsical activity with psychotherapy in PoC are not yet available. Therefore, the aim is to investigate the unimodal effects of psychotherapy and exercise therapy or the combination of both on fatigue in PoC patients with fatigue in a randomized clinical trial. Patients will be assigned to the three intervention groups (psychotherapy, physical rehabilitation, combination of both) stratified for sex, gender and BMI status. The intervention duration is 3 months with therapeutic online sessions for 50 min every 2 weeks. After another 3 months without intervention, the sustainability will evaluated. Secondarily, the investigators analyzes which patient benefits most from which therapeutic approach and seek for specific predictors of patient´s individual response.
The primary aim of the project is to map fatigue, cognitive and visual dysfunctions and possible underlying pathophysiological mechanisms in persons with long-term symptoms after a mild to moderate COVID-19 infection. Secondary goals are to study whether covarying factors such as depression and sleep disorders contribute to the results.
A study to investigate the prevention of COVID-19 with VYD222 in adults with immune compromise and in participants aged 12 years or older who are at risk of exposure to SARS-CoV-2
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 1 study in participants over the age of 18 years with mild to moderate COVID-19. This study aims to assess the safety, tolerability and preliminary antiviral effect of HH-120. This study includes dose escalation phase and dose expansion phase.
A monocentric observational study evaluates the accuracy of anticoagulation monitoring in critically ill patients on ECLS (extracorporeal life support) using new markers of the effect of direct thrombin inhibitors and also the accuracy of anticoagulation monitoring in patients on unfractionated heparin using anti-Xa. A more accurate setting of anticoagulation may lead to a reduction in the number of serious bleeding and thrombotic complications in these patients.