View clinical trials related to Syndrome.
Filter by:This is a double-blind randomized clinical trial which will start at June 2014 and end on June 2015 in Isfahan city. Serum insulin level is considered as a key variable and the sample size calculated 70 persons (35 persons for control group and 35 persons for patient group). Patient group will receive magnesium supplement (250 milligram) and the other group will receive placebo which is similar to the magnesium tablets in color, odor and appearance both for 8 weeks. All subjects will complete 4 physical activity and 4 dietary records. Outcome measurements including sex hormone levels, metabolic and inflammatory profiles will be measured at the beginning and end of the study as well as anthropetric measurements.
The study will determine the benefit of Colchicine versus placebo for cardiac surgery patients on the post-operative development of atrial fibrillation and post-pericardiotomy syndrome. Primary Objective. Colchicine will reduce the composite endpoint of incidence of post-operative atrial fibrillation and post-pericardiotomy syndrome at 3 months following cardiac surgery. Secondary Objectives. 1. Colchicine will reduce the incidence of constrictive physiology on echocardiography at 3 months following cardiac surgery. 2. Reduction in the burden of symptomatic and asymptomatic atrial fibrillation in the 3 months following cardiac surgery with the use of colchicine.
This is a multicenter, prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel group clinical trial with adaptive dose selection in subjects with post-polio syndrome (PPS). The main purpose of this study is to select a dose of Flebogamma 5% DIF and confirm the efficacy of the selected Flebogamma® 5% DIF dose by assessing physical performance, as measured by Two-Minute Walk Distance (2MWD) test. The study will consist of 2 stages, with each stage consisting of a screening period (up to 4 weeks), a treatment period (52 weeks), and a follow-up period (24 weeks).
The primary objective of the study was to provide required access of investigational product (darbepoetin alfa) beyond the end of the active treatment period (EOATP) of the darbepoetin alfa MDS 20090160 (NCT01362140) study for patients who had continued demonstration of benefit from darbepoetin alfa treatment and to describe the safety of longer-term use in this patient population.
This surveillance's objectives are 1. Unknown adverse reactions 2. Incidences of adverse drug reaction 3. Efficacy during long-term administration 4. Factors considered to have effect to safety and effectiveness 5. Incidences of status epileptics, skin disorders and hyper sensitivity reaction, and central nervous system-related adverse events(ataxia , somnolence and/or dizzy, etc.)
Many metabolic complications can develop after liver transplant including: diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity, heart attacks and stroke. The goal of this study is to look at the safety and effect of 2 well known and established diet regimens on the people who had a prior liver transplant and investigate whether it helps with the control of these comorbidities.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect on the frequency of tonic-clonic and clonic seizures of clobazam as adjunctive therapy compared to placebo after 16 weeks of treatment in paediatric patients aged ≥1 to ≤16 years with Dravet Syndrome.
The purpose of the study is to investigate effect of medical treatment and prognosis of Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS)
This single-institution, phase II study is designed to test the ability to achieve donor hematopoietic engraftment while maintaining low rates of transplant-related mortality (TRM) using busulfan- and fludarabine-based conditioning regimens with busulfan therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) for patients with various inherited metabolic disorders (IMD) and severe osteopetrosis (OP).
This study attempts to study a new ventilation mode in children with Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Despite decades of research, no intervention has brought about a significant decrease in ARDS mortality. Moreover, most of the studies are adult-based and have been extrapolated to children. Airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) mode is hypothesized to be superior in terms of lower need for sedation, shorter duration of mechanical ventilation, etc. It is unique and the first worldwide randomized controlled trial on APRV mode in children. We plan to recruit a minimum of 50 children aged (1 month-12 years) in each group. The study is to be conducted at the Post-Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh between March 2014 to March 2016. This trial would recruit children with respiratory failure and early ARDS and, randomize them to receive either conventional ventilation or the APRV mode. Rest of the supportive care has also been protocolized so that both groups receive treatment as per the existing best practices in every aspect. The primary outcome being studied is the number of ventilator-free days. The secondary outcomes include length of PICU stay, hospital stay, organ-failure free days, 28 day & 3 month survival, biomarkers of lung injury (IL-6, IL-8, Angiopoeitin-2, soluble-ICAM-1, etc), functional status, Pulmonary function tests, etc. Funding request would be sent to the Indian Council of Medical Research, New Delhi, India. Assessing lung biomarkers like Interleukin-6 would assess the role of different modes of ventilation in acting as triggers for multi-organ dysfunction as well as for worsening lung injury. This pathbreaking research is likely to open up new avenues upon completion.