View clinical trials related to CCHS.
Filter by:Congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS) is a neuro-respiratory disease characterized by lifethreatening sleep-related hypoventilation involving an alteration of CO2/H+ chemosensitivity. This suggests cortical activity during awakening to maintain breathing. Cortical activity to keep breathing is usually associated with breathing discomfort ; this is the case in healthy subjects under non invasive ventilation (NIV) or with expiratory charge as well as in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. This can suggest that CCHS may be breathless at rest and this discomfort could be reduced by NIV. The objective is to evaluate dyspnea with a multi dimensional score, MDP, in CCHS patient at rest in every day life and during 1H session of NIV. The investigators will perform a prospective, including 20 CCHS patients. MDP scores will be measure before and after 1H-non invasive ventilation as well as a visual scale of 100mm in order to evaluate variation of breathing discomfort before/after NIV. The investigators expect that CCHS patients don't have rest dyspnea but NIV would improve breathing discomfort that would mean they have latent rest dyspnea.
Congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS) is a rare disorder of autonomic and respiratory regulation that frequently alters oxygen delivery to the brain. In CCHS, neurocognitive function has been of great concern because of the potential for repeated hypoxemia and hypercarbia in activities of daily living in addition to hypoventilation with related hypoxemia and hypercarbia during sleep. As the world's leading referral center for CCHS, the Center for Autonomic Medicine in Pediatrics (CAMP) is engaged in ongoing research to identify factors that impact neurocognitive performance in patients with CCHS in order to optimize clinical management and improve long term neurocognitive outcomes. The purpose of this IRB-approved research study is to implement the NIH Toolbox as a standard measurement of cognitive health in patients with CCHS. Further, the study aims to determine how intrinsic and extrinsic disease factors such as age at diagnosis, PHOX2B mutation type and genotype, and nature of past and present artificial respiratory intervention affect the NIH Toolbox Cognitive scores of individuals with CCHS. Eligible participants will complete a 45-minute NIH Toolbox assessment and parents (or adult participants) will complete an associated, 15-minute Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) questionnaire.