View clinical trials related to COPD Exacerbation.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to compare pressure controlled continuous mandatory ventilation versus pressure support ventilation during the night for weaning to mechanical ventilation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients and their impact onto sleep quality.
40 outpatients with exacerbations of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases (COPD) will be enrolled in a multi-centre, open-label, randomised, pilot study. Two treatments will be compared, ceftidoren 200 mg bid for 5 days and levofloxacin 500 mg once daily for 7 days. Primary objective of the study is to evaluate the effects of the treatment on serum inflammatory biomarkers and the secondary objective is to evaluate the clinical and microbiological efficacy at the Test Of Cure visit (TOC), DAY 7-10 (end of treatment). The study foresees 4 visits: Visit 1 (enrolment, day 1 of treatment); Visit 2 (day 2-4); Visit 3 (Test Of Cure-TOC visit, day 7-10 end of treatment), Visit 3 (Late Post Therapy assessment, Day 28-30). The primary parameter to test the efficacy of the study medications will be the assessment of the speed of reduction of inflammatory parameters (CRP, PCT and KL6). Every reduction of 10% will be taken into account. The comparison between treatments will be performed at visit 2 and 3.
To demonstrate the additional benefit of roflumilast when added on to fixed-dose combination (FDC) LABA/ICS in the reduction of exacerbations in subjects with severe to very severe COPD.
The minimally invasive extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal may decrease the respiratory load during chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation, reducing the need to advance the respiratory care toward invasive mechanical ventilation in patients refractory to non-invasive ventilatory support (NIV), or decreasing the need of ventilatory support in patients already invasively ventilated, thereby accelerating the weaning process. The investigators intend to perform a multi-center experimental non randomized single arm prospective study to investigate the efficacy of the Decap Smart in reducing the intubation rate or the duration of invasive mechanical ventilation in patients with COPD treated either with NIV or invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) for severe respiratory failure and hypercapnia. The results of the study will be compared to the data available in the literature.
Acute exacerbations of COPD remain a common cause of morbidity and are associated with a sustained increase in the normal respiratory symptoms of dyspnoea, cough, and sputum volume and purulence. It has previously been shown that a change in cough symptoms occurs in 51.7% of exacerbations in COPD. We wish to record cough during a COPD exacerbation to determine whether this can be a objective marker of exacerbation duration and severity.
Aim: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the use feasibility of FreeO2 so as to deliver automatically oxygen and to enable a remote medical monitoring with a homogeneous patient population hospitalize for Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)exacerbation. Hypothesis: The principal hypothesis is that FreeO2 is possible and well-accepted by nurses and medical personnel and there are advantages to use this system. In comparison with the common oxygen delivery (the rotameter), the hypothesis is that FreeO2 system will make for a better control of the oxygen saturation in function of designed target, reducing the desaturation time and hyperoxia. We think that oxygen weaning will be faster than classical way if it is automated. In addition, FreeO2 could reduce the number of intervention by nurse personnel and to improve the support with centralized monitoring in the FreeO2 group.
Evaluation of systematic administration of oral prednisolone (1mg/Kg/day) as an add on therapy in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients admitted to intensive care unit (ICU) for severe exacerbation of COPD. Patients with pneumonia are excluded. Randomization is stratified according to ventilatory support: non invasive or conventional ventilation.The major outcome is the ICU mortality rate in overall population and stratified according to ventilatory mode (noninvasive ventilation (NIV) versus conventional). Secondary outcomes are superinfection necessitating a new antibiotic course, Length of mechanical ventilation (MV) (and ventilatory free days), Length of ICU stay, The frequency of gastric bleeding episodes that of frequency of hyperglycemic episodes.
The aims of this study are:1.To evaluate the utility of quadriceps RMNMS (repetitive magnetic neuromuscular stimulation) in the evolution of COPD patients after hospital admission for acute exacerbation.2 To evaluate the time schedule of recovery changes in muscle parameters ,exercise capacity and quality of life after acute exacerbation. 3.To test the use of this new method of training in acute clinical situations. Patients: COPD patients admitted to the Hospital with acute exacerbation. Group 1: RMNMS Treatment .Group 2 : sham RMNMS treatment. Randomized assignment by minimization method. PROTOCOL Training Group: 10 days after discharge and during 8 weeks, 2-3 days/week. Measures: Spirometry, Plethysmography ,Diffusion Test. Main outcomes: Exercise test (Six minutes walking distance). Muscle function: MVC. Health related quality of life.
Treatment with short acting β2 agonists for exacerbations of COPD results in clinical improvement. It has not been established whether combining short acting β2 agonists to other bronchodilators is more effective than β2 agonists alone. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of combination of SABA and MgSO4 in comparison to SABA and ipratropium bromide (IB) in patients attending the emergency department for AECOPD.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether treatment with antibiotics plus a TNFalpha antagonist will provide more effective treatment for acute COPD exacerbation compared to the current standard treatment of antibiotics plus prednisone.