View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to understand how the introduction of an app-based intervention changes knowledge, attitudes, and practices on COVID-19 self-testing.
In addition to respiratory involvement, SARS-CoV 2, the virus responsible for coronavirus 2019 or Covid-19, appears to be responsible for renal involvement such as acute renal failure or proteinuria, so the mechanisms are not known at this time. The consequences of Covid-19 on renal function in the short and long term are not known. It is important to be able to better document these renal impairments to understand the mechanisms of this disease. The main objective of this study is to describe the prevalence of Covid-19-related renal damage (acute renal failure, proteinuria, microalbuminuria, hematuria) in a large cohort of patients in intensive care for SARS-CoV 2 infection with severe respiratory impairment. The other objectives will be to evaluate in this cohort the impact of these renal impairments on the severity of the Covid-19 disease, and to compare them to the renal impairments of patients in intensive care for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) due to other respiratory diseases. Blood and urine samples will be taken at the time of intubation in all critically ill patients with respiratory distress requiring mechanical ventilation for Covid-19 or other cause of respiratory distress with PaO2/FiO2 ratio < 300. Patients will be followed for the duration of their ICU and hospital stay. Data will be collected prospectively in three ICUs in the University Hospitals of Marseille.
The overall goal of this project is to advance the understanding of underlying mechanisms impacting performance fatigability and perceived fatigability in Veterans with post-COVID-19 fatigue and explore the safety and feasibility of a home-based "minimal-dose" resistance exercise program in this population. The central hypothesis is that declines in force capacity, skeletal muscle oxygen extraction, and affective responses to physical activity offer potential mechanisms through which fatigability is increased in Veterans with post-COVID-19 fatigue. Moreover, home-based resistance exercise delivered remotely may provide a safe and feasibility treatment option for targeting neuromuscular and neurobehavioral factors influencing fatigability severity in this population.
Up to 20% of patients with Covid-19 develop symptoms that last more than 3 months, which is known as long Covid or Post-Covid-19 condition. The mechanism of the long term symptoms is not totally understood although inflammation, autoimmune reactions and thromboembolism are among suspected contributors. At Helsinki University hospital, a long Covid clinic was opened in June 2021. The aim of this cohort study is to monitor the patients that attend the clinic, follow up their functional abilities, quality of life and prognosis.
This randomized controlled trial aims to implement and evaluate a comprehensive package of digital health interventions for integrated COVID-non-communicable diseases (NCDs) care to manage NCDs in primary care facilities in rural Pakistan. The main questions it aims to answer are 1) whether such interventions are effective; 2) how they were implemented; and 3) whether such interventions are cost-effective. 30 rural health centers in Punjab Province, Pakistan will be randomized into two groups. The intervention group will provide a comprehensive package of digital health interventions to connect patients, patient champions, and public health providers to improve the management of NCDs during the pandemic, including 1) providing training to health providers regarding an integrated NCD-COVID guideline; 2) using a smartphone app to improve NCD case management and linking with patient champions; and 3) employing telementoring platform to improve quality of care. Usual care will be provided in the control group. Researchers will compare the two groups to see if the systolic blood pressure can be controlled better in the intervention group at 10 months.
This study will address specific questions concerning the additional protection of the AZ COVID-19 vaccine as a second booster dose in preventing severe COVID-19 outcomes (hospitalisation, ICU admission etc) and will provide data to inform COVID-19 vaccine booster dose recommendations.
Oral symptoms of corona virus disease have been reported by many studies. The lack of direct contact between the dentist and the patient during the active disease presented an obstacle to build a strong body of evidence. the aim of the study is to report the oral symptoms of COVID-19 and correlate the occurrence of these symptoms with various disease-related factors.
This study will examine the effectiveness of a 6-week behavioral intervention for patients who are recently diagnosed with COVID-19. Patients and their households will be randomized to one of two groups (Standard of Care vs. Enhanced Standard of Care). Patients in the Standard-of-Care group will receive established clinical care and follow-up. Patients in the Enhanced Standard-of-Care group will receive standard-of-care plus tailored, real-time text messaging and virtual counseling delivered by promotores/as. The investigators hypothesize that households in the Enhanced Standard-of-Care group will have fewer (any new) household COVID-19 infectivity rates compared to households in the standard-of-care group post-intervention.
The COVID-19 pandemic has become a major public health challenge, and the treatment options for the disease are currently limited. The commonly used oral small-molecule anti-COVID-19 drugs in China are Nirmatrelvir-Ritonavir and Azvudine. These drugs have been tested in pre-marketing clinical trials in patients with non-severe COVID-19 infection and have demonstrated therapeutic effects in inhibiting virus transmission and preventing disease progression. However, until now, the efficacy and safety of these drugs in patients with moderate to severe COVID-19 infections remains unclear. Therefore, this study is aiming to compare the efficacy and safety of Azvudine and Nirmatrelvir-Ritonavir in moderate to severe COVID-19 infections. This study will be a multicenter, randomized, controlled clinical trial study in patients hospitalized with moderate to severe COVID-19 infections. Recovery of clinical symptoms, nucleic acid negative conversion, improvement in oxygenation index, and imaging improvement will be used as study endpoints.
Long COVID patients experience high symptom burden for many months after initial infection of the COVID-19 virus. This study will investigate a mobile intervention Merging Yoga and Self-Management Skills (MY-Skills Mobile) as a complementary therapy for fatigue, pain, mood and quality of life in long COVID patients at the UCHealth Center for Integrative Medicine. The study aim is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of MY-Skills Mobile and research procedures including planned assessments.