View clinical trials related to Syndrome.
Filter by:At the conclusion of study AZA PH GL 2003 CL 001 (NCT00071799), eligible participants could be enrolled in an optional extension phase in order to continue treatment with azacitidine until it became commercially available; the continued treatment was for ethical and safety reasons only and not to provide additional efficacy data.
To survey the prevalence and the mortality of the Acute Lung Injury/ Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ALI/ARDS) in 12 university hospital ICUs in Shanghai.
MODIfY is a prospective, single center, open label, randomized, controlled two arms, Phase II-trial to evaluate the ability of ivabradine to reduce an elevated heart rate in Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS) patients. The primary end point is the proportion of patients with a reduction of heart rate by at least 10 beats per minute (bpm) within 4 days. This trial will randomize 70 patients (men and women, aged ≥ 18 years) with newly diagnosed MODS (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II-score ≥ 20, diagnosis within ≤ 24 hours), with an elevated heart rate (sinus rhythm with HR ≥ 90 bpm) and contraindications to beta-blockers (BBs). Treatment period will last 4 days. All patients will be followed for up to six months.
The objective of this study is to assess the effects of a high protein (HP) and a normal protein diet (NP) on patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and body mass index (BMI)-matched controls in a sample of southern Brazilian women. Patients will be randomized to receive high protein (30% protein, 40% carbohydrate, 30% lipid) or normal protein (15% protein, 55% carbohydrate, 30% lipid) during eight weeks. The investigators hypothesis is that a different diet composition may have influences in changes of the main characteristics of PCOS, like hyperandrogenism and metabolic syndrome.
It is essential to know intestinal length and anastomotic type in post-operative short bowel syndrome patients. These parameters can help predict long-term intestinal failure with long-term parenteral nutrition usually needed for smallest lengths. Sometimes these parameters are unfortunately missing for lack of intraoperative measurement. Thus, it is necessary to develop non-invasive and reproducible techniques to assess small bowel length. This is the reason why the investigators will evaluate magnetic resonance (MR)-enterography and barium follow-through in this indication. There are at this time only two small studies evaluating barium follow-through for intestinal length measurement, and none evaluating MR-enterography. However, a major advantage of the latter is the lack of radiation exposure and possibility to perform 3D. This will be an open labelled single center crossover study. Short bowel syndrome patients of the investigators center will be included after consent. The sequence of exams (MR enterography followed by barium follow-through or vice-versa) will be randomly assigned. Peroperative short bowel length measurement will be available for all patients. There will be one month between the two exams. The main objective of this study is to assess the performance of MR-enterography in short bowel measurement in short bowel syndrome patients, the gold standard being peroperative length. Secondary objectives are to assess the performance of barium follow-through in short bowel measurement in these patients, and to show that barium follow-through does not perform better than MR-enterography. For that purpose the investigators will include 50 patients over 2 years.
Magnesium is the second most abundant ion in human cells and plays fundamental roles in several enzymatic reactions: it is involved in ATP production, in the phosphorylation of proteins, in glucose metabolism and in the contraction of cytoskeleton. Several epidemiological studies demonstrated that low dietary magnesium intake is inversely associated with diabetes mellitus, hypertension and metabolic syndrome. Magnesium could be related to important haemodynamic and metabolic anomalies: at vascular level it acts as an antagonist of calcium, especially in vascular smooth muscle cells, thus its deficit could enhance vascular contraction; with regard to glucose metabolism, magnesium is involved in the physiopathological mechanism of insulin resistance, through a reduction in cellular uptake of glucose. This condition and the subsequent compensatory hyperinsulinemia can ultimately lead to increased synthesis of proinflammatory cytokines and to endothelial dysfunction. Thus, magnesium depletion and subsequent alterations can increase the risk of developing vascular disease such as atherosclerosis and has been associated with cardiovascular events. Several clinical trials have explored the possible beneficial effect of magnesium supplementation on blood pressure, plasma lipids and insulin resistance but the results are often contradictory. One of the possibilities for these unclear results could be that in some of them the interventions started too late when haemodynamic and metabolic changes are more difficult to revert. The investigators hypothesis is that magnesium supplementation in a population at increased genetic risk of developing metabolic syndrome but without it could improve blood pressure and the other metabolic syndrome related components. Thus, the aim of the present study is to evaluate the effect of oral supplementation of magnesium (16.2 mmol/day of magnesium pidolate) on metabolic syndrome's components in a sample of 15 subjects who are at increased risk of developing metabolic syndrome since have a positive familiar history of type II diabetes mellitus and/or metabolic syndrome(AHA/NHLBI criteria).
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)and MR Spectroscopy of the brain are perfect tools to investigate the changes in the brainstem and brain evoked by the orthodromically impulses of a SCS.
This is a prospective trial of Revlimid for subjects who have a blood cell cancer called myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Cells in their marrow make proteins through messages that are carried from the genes. The amount of the message tells researchers if the protein it is going to make is high or low. This is known as expression of genes. The purpose of this study is to conduct a prospective trial testing the idea that expression of specific genes can help to predict which patients will respond to study drug administration with Revlimid (lenalidomide).
This randomised controlled trial (RCT) aimed at assessing the efficacy of hypnotherapy in group sessions (GHT) with a 12-months follow-up.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate salivary gland and labial mucous membrane transplantation in patients with severe symblepharon and dry eye secondary to Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS).