View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to investigate 5 doses of RPL554 and placebo, administered by pressurized metered dose inhaler (pMDI), in patients with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a respiratory disease that results in progressive airflow limitation and respiratory distress. Physiopathological features of COPD suggest that people who suffer from this disease have many risk factors for falls that have been identified in older individuals. The benefit of inspiratory muscle training (IMT) combined with a pulmonary rehabilitation programme (PRP) is uncertain. The investigators aimed to demonstrate that,in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients, IMT performed during a PRP is associated with an improvement of Balance.
The primary objective of this study is to investigate the biological determinants of sputum rheology variations.
This study examines the implications of providing remote physician care to home hospitalized patients compared to usual home hospital care with in-person/in-home physician visits.
Study comparing the same drugs as a dual combination product (budesonide and formoterol) given via two different inhalers. To see which one results in the best effect on breathing.
The study will develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a team-based follow-up program in general practice (GP) among people with chronic conditions.
This cross-sectional study aims to investigate what daily activities increase the risk of falling in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease patients (COPD).
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a progressive disease of the respiratory system that generally develops as a result of smoking. Most people with COPD are classified as having "mild" disease severity and may not have significantly impaired lung function (e.g. flow) as measured by traditional lung function tests. However, multiple studies have shown that patients with mild disease already have significant damage to the small airways and blood vessels of the pulmonary system. This results in a considerable portion of the lung that does not participate in gas exchange, a phenomenon called physiologic dead space. Mild COPD patients develop symptoms of intolerable breathlessness early in exercise compared with healthy individuals. Previous studies have shown that pulmonary vasodilators, which locally increase blood vessel radius, may improve gas exchange and reduce symptoms of breathlessness in patients with mild COPD. Therefore, the objective of this study is to determine the effect of reducing dead space with a pulmonary vasodilator on the intensity of breathlessness during exercise in patients with mild COPD. This five visit, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study will test the impact of inhaled nitric oxide, a direct vasodilator, during cardiopulmonary exercise on dead space and breathlessness intensity. Use of an esophageal catheter during testing will additionally permit measurement of neural drive to breathe and pulmonary mechanics throughout the protocol. Though patients with mild COPD represent the majority of the COPD population, their symptoms remain poorly managed by current, inefficient standard of care. The proposed study will examine dead space reduction as a novel therapeutic target for improving breathlessness and exercise tolerance in patients with mild COPD.
This study aims to evaluate the effect of planned inhaler medication training on self-care agency and self-efficacy level.
Smokers do not know the symptoms of cancer and wait on average 5 months with symptoms before consulting. 80% of lung cancers are diagnosed at too late and incurable stage. Systematic CT screening of smokers is under evaluation and currently not supported because expensive and little used in real life (in the US 1.8% of smokers after 7 years of establishment in the USA). An English study showed an increase in the number of operable stage cancers of 3% among smokers by calling them on a trailing cough by a simple poster campaign ("You smoke, you cough for more than 3 weeks, consult"). Regarding COPD, it is linked to tobacco in 85% of cases, affects 3.5 million French and is in 2013 the 4th leading cause of death in France. The evolution of COPD is marked by exacerbations, period of acute aggravation of symptoms, responsible for the deterioration of the quality of life or even hospitalization or death. COPD remains a silent killer responsible, according to this same summary review, of 16,500 deaths per year in France. Dr DENIS has developed a web application that has shown a 7-month survival benefit by early detection of lung cancer relapses based on the reporting of patient symptoms analyzed by a validated algorithm in 300 patients and 1 randomized trial. The Applitabac app takes this concept of symptom self-assessment by patients. By multiplying the number of symptoms analyzed compared to the English study, Applitabac should be able to increase the sensitivity of this early detection of COPD and increase the number of operable bronchial cancers and increase the chances of survival of patients.