View clinical trials related to Bronchiolitis.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to determine whether it is possible to identify, enroll, and deliver the study intervention (the corticosteroid dexamethasone) in hospitalized infants with bronchiolitis. Participants in this study will be given two doses of dexamethasone within 72 hours of enrollment, followed by 30 days of safety monitoring. Results of this feasibility pilot study may be used to inform the design of a future randomized controlled trial, whose results in turn could induce a paradigm shift in acute management of bronchiolitis.
Hospitalized children with respiratory disease are commonly monitored with continuous pulse oximetry and heart rate-respiratory rate monitors. These data streams generate >4,000 unique data points each patient-day, yet only a tiny fraction are used to inform care decisions. Failure to adequately summarize this large amount of data for clinicians may result in suboptimal care because clinicians may miss important data signals and may under- or over-react to individual data points. In children hospitalized with respiratory disease and in need of supplemental oxygen, there are a number of care decisions, currently made without adequate data, which could be informed by intelligent data visualization tools. This study has employed user-centered design to develop data displays that inform nurses' and respiratory therapists' decision-making in supplemental oxygen delivery. The investigators are now evaluating the effectiveness of these displays in the clinical care of patients with two common respiratory conditions—infants with bronchiolitis admitted to the general pediatrics ward and preterm infants requiring supplemental oxygen who are cared for in the neonatal intensive care unit. By reducing patient's time on supplemental oxygen and improving time with optimal oxygen saturations, this work has the potential to lead to a breakthrough innovation that improves both outcomes and value.
Bronchiolitis is an extremely common cause of respiratory illness in infants caused by viral infection.This study evaluates whether treatment with nitazoxanide (NTZ) reduces the duration and severity of respiratory symptoms caused by bronchiolitis. Half of the participants will receive NTZ while the other half will receive a placebo.
Study Design: This randomized, double blind, controlled, multi-centre study will occur in the Emergency Department, hospital-based Urgent Care Centre or paediatric outpatient clinics (collectively "ED") of 3 General Hospitals in Ontario and 1 in British Columbia.
This study is to determine whether sleep disorders contribute to impaired quality of life and mobility in patients with Bronchiolitis Obliterans syndrome and whether non invasive positive airways pressure ventilation can improve sleep, quality of life and mobility in this patient group.
This is a prospective, randomized, controlled, double-blinded, clinical trial Subject : 3mo ~ 24mo. aged infants with bronchiolitis The effect of 3 % NaCl nebulizer or dexamethasone on admission rate of these infants in ED.
The fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) in expired air is a reliable measure of airway inflammation and has been used as a marker in asthma and other respiratory illnesses such as primary ciliary dyskinesia, bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), liver cirrhosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cystic fibrosis (CF). Although, some exquisite bench research experiments have demonstrated stimulation of nitric oxide production in respiratory epithelial cells infected with RSV, there is a paucity of clinical data regarding levels of feNO in viral respiratory illness and specifically RSV. The investigators conducted a pilot study from the fall of 2007 until October of 2009, looking at FeNO levels in RSV infected patients and compared it to non-RSV viral infections. The investigators recruited a total of 28 RSV positive and 1 RSV negative subjects, as well as 4 control subjects. The investigators found FeNO values not statistically significant between the study group (the two-tailed p=0.09, considered not quite significant), but there was a trend of higher FeNO values in the non-RSV group when compared to the RSV group. A larger sample may detect a statistically significance between these 2 groups. Objectives: i. To determine if the fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (feNO) is elevated in hospitalized pediatric patients with viral lower respiratory illness when compared with normal subjects without respiratory symptoms. ii. To determine if there is a difference in feNO level between RSV and non-RSV infection in hospitalized pediatric patients with viral lower respiratory illness. Method of feNO measurement utilized the offline options for preschool children & infants appropriate for age as described in the 2005 Joint Statement of the American Thoracic Society & the European Respiratory Society when discussing tidal breathing techniques with uncontrolled flow rate. The investigators plan that our sample sizes for the RSV+ and control groups will be, by design, three times as large as the RSV- group. In order to achieve 80% power, the investigators will then require 45 control and 45 RSV+ patients, and 15 RSV- patients
Acute viral bronchiolitis is the principal cause of lower respiratory tract infection in infants worldwide. It is characterized by a first episode of respiratory distress preceded by rhinorrhea, cough and fever. The majority of patients present with mild symptoms which can be treated safely at home by parents. Every year between October thru April emergency departments in North America are overwhelmed with patients waiting to be seen with mild respiratory infections, such as bronchiolitis. Thus new strategies in health care have to be elaborated to reduce costs and waiting time in the emergency department. The investigators hypothesize that patients liberated from triage with mild acute viral bronchiolitis would have the same rate of office re-visits than those with mild acute bronchiolitis in the emergency department.
The purpose of the study is to determine whether corticosteroids are beneficial to children with bronchiolitis whose breathing gets better after being given a breathing treatment with albuterol.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether nebulized hypertonic saline solution reduces the admission rate 48 hours after initial treatment in the emergency department, when compared to normal saline solution (placebo). We hypothesise that patients with bronchiolitis who receive nebulized hypertonic saline solution will have less respiratory distress, less duration of symptoms and therefore less risk of being hospitalized than those receiving normal saline solution.