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Pulmonary Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Pulmonary Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT05362526 Recruiting - COPD Clinical Trials

High Flow vs Conventional Oxygen in Head and Neck Surgery

Start date: July 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Patients undergoing major head and neck surgery are at risk for postoperative pulmonary complications. The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of high flow heated humidified oxygen at preventing postoperative pulmonary complications after major head and neck surgery, when compared to conventional oxygen therapy (aerosol cool mist).

NCT ID: NCT05153967 Recruiting - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Cooperative Assessment of Late Effects for SCD Curative Therapies

COALESCE
Start date: July 12, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sickle Cell Disease is one of the most common genetic diseases in the United States, occurring in approximately 1 in 400 births. Approximately 100,000 individuals are diagnosed with SCD in the United States. Mortality for children with SCD has decreased substantially over the past 4 decades, with >99% of those born in high resource settings, including the United States, France, and England, now surviving to 18 years of age. However, the life expectancy of adults with SCD is severely shortened. Dysfunction of the heart, lung, and kidney is directly associated with decreased life expectancy. With the variety of curative therapies that are now available for SCD, long-term health outcomes studies are time-sensitive. As of now, efforts to determine long-term health outcomes following curative therapies for SCD have been limited. Though curative therapies initially should provide a cure for symptoms of SCD, there is the risk of late health outcomes to consider. Defining health outcomes following curative therapy is essential to improve personalized decision-making when considering curative versus disease-modifying therapeutic options. The primary goal of this study is to determine whether curative therapies for individuals with SCD will result in improved or worsening heart, lung, and kidney damage when compared to individuals with SCD receiving standard therapy. The investigators will also explore whether certain genes are associated with a good or bad outcome after curative therapy for SCD.

NCT ID: NCT05147688 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Safety of Cultured Allogeneic Adult Umbilical Cord Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Pulmonary Diseases

Start date: December 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This trial will study the safety and efficacy of intravenous infusion of cultured allogeneic adult umbilical cord derived mesenchymal stem cells for the treatment of Pulmonary Diseases

NCT ID: NCT05006729 Recruiting - Heart Diseases Clinical Trials

Risk Underlying Rural Areas Longitudinal Cohort Study (RURAL) Heart and Lung Study

RURAL
Start date: January 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UTHSCSA) will serve as the site for the RURAL Study Coordinating Center, led by PI Vasan Ramachandran, MD. The primary function of the Study Coordinating Center (SCC) is to serve as an administrative liaison between all of the RURAL study's cores. The SCC schedules, facilitates, and hosts, all RURAL meetings including preparation for Observational Study Monitoring Board (OSMB) meetings, and maintains direct communication with the study's program officers at NHLBI. The SCC monitors the overall progress of RURAL and keeps all RURAL cores abreast of study updates through meetings, emails, newsletters. It also maintains the official RURAL website and serves as an administrator for investigators seeking to collaborate with RURAL through the submission of Ancillary Studies. The SCC will have no direct interaction with any participants, nor will it have access to identifiable data.

NCT ID: NCT04996173 Recruiting - Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trials

Cryospray Therapy Versus Standard of Care for Benign Airway Stenosis (CryoStasis)

Start date: October 25, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Benign central airway stenosis (BCAS) is an important cause of both pulmonary morbidity and mortality. Notable causes include post-intubation stenosis, collagen vascular diseases, airway trauma, infectious and idiopathic subglottic stenosis (iSGS). Surgery is the preferred definite option; however, the first therapeutic attempt is usually endoscopic to temporarily restore airway patency and symptomatic improvement. Several endoscopic modalities exist for treatment. Most commonly, thermal or laser therapy to make radial incisions into the stenotic lesion, followed by balloon dilation to increase the area of patency. Clinicians may also inject steroids or antineoplastic agents such as mitomycin C. All of these methods have benefits and associated risks. Symptomatic stenosis frequently reoccurs with these methods. For example, the investigators have been doing 3-4 ballon dilations procedures a week at our institution. Spray cryotherapy (SCT) is a novel FDA-cleared technique that allows for liquid nitrogen to be delivered through the working channel of a bronchoscope. Few retrospective studies exist without more robust clinical trial data to reduce the risk of bias and support its widespread use. The investigators postulate that SCT and standard of care techniques will improve airway patency volume at six months than the standard of care techniques alone. Some of the proposed advantages include improved wound healing which may translate to less scar tissue and thus improvements in airway patency for a longer duration of time.

NCT ID: NCT04930926 Recruiting - Infection Clinical Trials

Leukocyte Morphological Parameters as Prognostic Markers in CAP

Start date: November 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

An innovative multicenter project that aims to study the evolution and predictive value of new leukocyte morphological parameters (CPD) in patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Our project has 3 objectives: 1.- To demonstrate that the use of some leukocyte morphology parameters at the time of diagnosis, and their changes in the first 72 hours, can help us to better identify the severity and prognosis of these patients and to discriminate between bacterial etiology of viral. 2.- Make a comparison with other more studied inflammation and cardiovascular biomarkers such as C-reactive protein, pro-calcitonin and pro-adrenomedullin. 3.- Incorporate some of these CPDs parameters to a new prediction rule with greater sensitivity and specificity than those existing up to now (PSI, CURB-65, SCAP, ATS / IDSA). Methodology: The study will be carried out in 3 hospitals (Galdakao-Usánsolo, Basurto and San Pedro de Logroño). Prospective observational study with longitudinal follow-up up to 30 days after the diagnosis of admitted patients with CAP. Patients will be included consecutively for 24 months; Sociodemographic variables, duration of symptoms, previous antibiotic therapy, severity of presentation, etiological diagnosis, treatment administered and evolution during hospital stay and up to 30 days will be analyzed. As dependent variables of severe CAP we will use, on the one hand, poor evolution (therapeutic failure, and / or need for admission to high-monitoring units such as ICU or Intermediate Respiratory Care Unit (ICU) and / or 30-day mortality) and, for another, a microbiological etiological diagnosis. For statistical processing, univariate and multivariate analyzes and logistic regression models will be used to create a predictive rule.

NCT ID: NCT04789603 Recruiting - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Effects of Using Mask During the 6-minute Walking Test in Times of COVID-19

Start date: May 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Since the beginning of the pandemic caused by SARC-CoV 2, more than 81 million cases have been diagnosed and caused around 1,7 million deaths. Currently, a drug is being sought for the treatment of coronavirus. The worldwide effort to create an effective and safe COVID-19 vaccine is beginning to yield results. Several vaccines now have been authorized around the globe; many more remain in development. Nonetheless, in the absence of effective pharmacological treatment and given the virus's transmission capacity, different alternatives have been proposed to stop the transmission of the virus. Therefore, these preventive measures against transmission are expected to remain in force for some time. The transmission of the virus occurs from person-to-person; different studies conclude that transmission occurs by aerosols from respiratory droplets. The optimal distance between people to stop person-to-person transmission is uncertain. For this reason and given that there is no effective drug, transmission prevention is of great importance especially for pandemic mitigation in community settings. The World Health Organization (WHO) established simple precautions to prevent the spread of the virus such as physical distancing, wearing a mask, keeping rooms well ventilated, avoiding crowds, cleaning your hands, and coughing into a bent elbow or tissue. For this reason, the use of the mask has been proposed in several countries, being mandatory in many of them, for use in the health environment and daily use. The WHO recommends different types of masks depending on the person, where it will be used, or the population incidence in the area. Wearing a medical /surgical mask is recommended for people over 60, those who have underlying medical conditions, feel unwell, and/or look after an ill family member. For health workers, respirator masks (such as FFP2, FFP3, N95, N99) should be used in settings where procedures are generating aerosols. The use of a mask could imply an inspiratory and expiratory restraint and generate a feeling of discomfort in many people. It is responsible for an increase in the inspiratory and expiratory pressures generated. This feeling of discomfort and the increment of pressures causes shallow and forced breathing and increases the respiratory accessory musculature activation. Person et al. observed that the subjects who used a mask felt dyspnea clinically and significantly higher than those who did not use it. However, to our knowledge, no study has analyzed the parameters of physical effort, respiratory parameters, self-perceived dyspnea, and muscle activation using different types of masks in healthy subjects. For this reason, the present study hypothesis is that there are no changes between wearing and not-wearing a mask (surgical or N-95) in the effort and ventilatory parameters, even though there may be an increase in the tone of the cervical muscles or the perception of dyspnea using a face mask. This study aims to observe the effect that the surgical mask and the N-95 mask have in the distance walked, in the oxygenometry, in the heart rate, in the sensation of dyspnea, and the tone of the inspiratory accessory muscles during the 6 minutes walking test. Procedure After verifying that the subjects meet the inclusion criteria and sign the consent, they will be given a registration number. An investigator will observe the number in a random list and included the participant in one of the three groups (without a mask, with a surgical mask, and with N95 mask). This researcher will make an initial registration of demographic data (gender, age, weight, height, cardiorespiratory pathology, smoker, number of cigarettes per day, a sport performed, hours of daily sport, and days of sport per week). Before the test, all the subjects will have to remain for 30 minutes without a mask, breathing normally. This phase will be called the resting phase. Subsequently, the subjects will go to the area where the 6MWT will be carried out. Each one of them will be performed the test according to the group to which they will be assigned. An investigator, blinded to the subsequent assessment, will encourage the participants to take the 6MWT according to the recommendations mentioned above. After performing the 6MWT, all subjects will go to the assessment area. All the subjects will wear a surgical mask so that the researcher can not know to which group they have been assigned. Besides, this researcher will not have access to the registration number or the 6-minute walking test area. At the end of each resting phase, SpO2 and baseline HR will be recorded. After every 6MWT, the HR, SpO2, and self-perceived dyspnea will be recorded. The muscle tone will also be assessed with the MyotonPRO in middle scalene and SCM. Subjects will have the option of retaking the test, going through all the phases mentioned above.

NCT ID: NCT04767074 Recruiting - Cough Clinical Trials

A Non-pharmacological Cough Control Therapy

Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Coughing affects almost all individuals with ILD leading to physical, psychological and social distress and prevents individuals from performing their activities of daily living, working or socialising in public places. Unfortunately, there are no licensed medications available to treat chronic cough and the few drugs that have been tried resulted in little efficacy and significant side effects. Drug-free cough control interventions have shown promise in reducing the severity and impact of coughing on patients' lives but have not been tested in individuals with ILD. This study aims to explore the feasibility and effectiveness of a non-pharmacological cough control therapy, as an adjuvant of pulmonary rehabilitation, in patients with ILD and chronic cough (>8 weeks in duration).

NCT ID: NCT04676828 Recruiting - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

Functional Lung Avoidance SPECT-guided Radiation Therapy of Lung Cancer

ASPECT
Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Study aims to determine if functional lung avoidance based on perfusion single photon emission (SPECT)/CT scan, improves toxicity outcomes for patients with advanced lung cancer undergoing chemo-radiotherapy. Functional avoidance implies a dose plan that takes functional distribution in the lung into account, and avoids highly functional lung volumes sparing them from radiation.

NCT ID: NCT04619199 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

Influence of Socioeconomic and Environmental Factors on the Natural History of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

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

Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis(IPF) is the most common idiopathic interstitial lung disease whose cause is unknown. With age and gender, socio-economic factors are the most influential indicators of health. At present there is very little data on socio-economic factors in the IPF. The investigators hypothesize that a lower socio-economic level and / or exposure to various air pollutants may influence the IPF's natural history, including the severity of diagnosis and prognosis of the IPF. The investigators also hypothesize that the deleterious effect of air pollutants is modulated by individual susceptibility (shorter telomeres) and that this effect is related to oxidative stress and shortening of telomeres.