View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Filter by:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a group of disease characterized by obstructed airflow. Usually, the lung structure is gradually impaired along with the progression of the disease. Recently, the treatment of disease is challenged by shortage of approaches for regenerating the injured lung tissue. Here in this study, investigators intend to perform a single-centered, open, concurrent-controlled phase I/II clinical trial with autologous bronchial basal cells on COPD treatment since they were proved to regenerate lung tissue in animal models. The participants is recruited and divided into experiment group and control group. For patients from experiment group, bronchial basal cells will be isolated, expanded, carefully characterized in vitro and transplanted autologously into lung by fiberoptic bronchoscopy. No intervention is performed for patients from control group. During the study, the safety and efficacy will be evaluated on all the subjects by measuring the key indicators.
This study was conducted to examine the effects of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease management education given to patients diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease on self-care agency and rational drug use. This study has a pretest-posttest quasi-experimental design. A total of 83 patients with COPD were randomly assigned to a intervention group or control group, who met the inclusion criteria.
This is a 12-week (with an extension to 52 weeks in a subset of participants) study comparing the safety of BGF MDI HFO twice daily (BID) with BGF MDI HFA BID in participants with moderate to very severe COPD.
The aim of this clinical trial is to investigate the safety and tolerability of oral, once-daily EP395 administration in COPD patients for 12 weeks.
The study will evaluate bioequivalence, pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability of Budesonide, Glycopyrronium and Formoterol (BGF) metered dose inhaler (MDI) formulated with hydrofluoroolefin (HFO) [Test] and hydrofluoroalkane (HFA) [Reference] in healthy participants (male or female).
Twelwe patients with COPD and long term oxygen treatment (LTOT) will be included in the study. An automated home oxygen titrations (HOT) device will be attached to the patient´s home oxygen equipment. For 2x4 consequent days, the patients will be monitored and saturations, oxygen flow and physical activity level will be registered. In randomized order, the patients will use their usual fixed oxygen dose or automated oxygen titration during the first four days and then crossover. The monitoring consists of a wrist pulse oximeter (register pulse and saturation which is send to the HOT device) and a physical activity sensor attached to the patient's knee. At study start and after both of the four days the patients´dyspnea and QoL will be assessed. After the study period the patients will in an explorative design based on qualitative methodology be interviewed in order to explore the patients experiences with automated oxygen titration during daily activity and on dyspnea.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is one of the most common respiratory diseases. Early detection and treatment are critical to prevent the deterioration of COPD. In this study, investigators aim to develop an algorithm that can detect and infer the severity level of COPD from physiological parameters and audio data which are collected by a wearable device. Investigators will complete the study in two stages: stage 1. A panel study to assess the ability to infer the severity of COPD by intelligent terminal devices; stage 2. Establish an algorithm that can detect and infer the severity level of COPD by intelligent terminal devices.
The aim of this study is to examine the effectiveness of inspiratory muscle training (IMT) before bronchoscopic procedure in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Patients (COPD). Patients with a diagnosis of COPD, who are listed for a bronchoscopic procedure and referred to the pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) clinic, will be randomly divided into two groups. Standard PR exercise program will be applied to both groups. In addition to the standard program, IMT will be applied to one of the groups. The effect of IMT on exercise program gains will be examined.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)is a multifactorial, progressive chronic lung disease that causes airflow restriction. Study was conducted To Compare the effects of supervised and self-directed pulmonary rehabilitation on cough and sputum expectoration in patients of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
High-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) therapy is increasingly used in the management of acute respiratory failure. Its clinical application has been expanded also in other specific settings In stable COPD patients and in those recovering from acute exacerbation, HFNC can reduce PaCO2, respiratory rate, minute ventilation and respiratory effort. The aim of this randomized crossover physiological study is to investigate the effects on PaCO2 levels of two different nasal cannula ('Optiflow + Duet' interface vs "standard" nasal interface) in COPD patients with persistent hypercapnia following an acute severe exacerbation