View clinical trials related to Cough.
Filter by:Persistent cough is a distressing symptom for people with respiratory disorders. Patients also often experience an ongoing urge-to-cough that prompts coughing, and which fails to resolve the sensation. Understanding how the brain controls cough and the urge-to-cough could lead to new cough suppressing therapies. The overall objective of this project is to use functional brain imaging (fMRI) to identify brain regions that are involved in the exaggerated urge-to-cough in humans with chronic cough. Our focus will be on the brainstem where information from the airways first arrives in the central nervous system.
The study aims to evaluate psychiatric disorders and clinical features of children with psychogenic cough. Psychiatric disorders are assessed via a semi-structured interview (Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia) and clinical features are investigated via sociodemographic form, which was developped by researchers. Investigator planned to compare psychiatric diagnoses, specifically anxiety and depression, with children referred to pediatric clinics.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety of two doses of gefapixant (MK-7264) in Japanese adult participants with refractory or unexplained chronic cough.
Comparison of citric acid and mannitol cough provocation tests among subjects with chronic cough and healthy volunteers.
This is a first-in-human study that will investigate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of ascending single and multiple doses of BLU-5937 using a double blind, placebo controlled, randomized, adaptive, single center study design. The influence of food on the pharmacokinetics of BLU-5037 will also be investigated.
The purpose of the study is to explore the value which cough rate might provide for asthma self-management. In this study, the focus will be specifically on nocturnal cough rate. The plan is to use a longitudinal study design, in order to investigate to which extent trends in the nocturnal cough rates might have meaningful implications for future asthma control and asthma exacerbations of patients. The incidence of nocturnal cough in asthmatics will be described and visualized over the course of one month in the first stage of the study. Additionally, the aim will be to identify and model trends in nocturnal cough rates. Measuring cough is very time-consuming. Currently, there are no cough frequency monitors available, which measure cough rates in a fully automated and unobtrusive way. Consequently, manual labeling of cough based on video or sound recordings is still considered to be the gold standard for measuring cough rates by medical guidelines. Recently, a machine learning algorithm was successfully designed to automatically detect cough in a proof of concept study. This machine learning algorithm will be further developed in order to provide robust results in the field. The focus of this study will be the cough during the night time due to the limited interfering noise, which greatly facilitates manual labeling and enables a more reliable detection rate of the machine learning algorithm. Apart from developing a machine learning algorithm for cough detection, data will be gathered for the assessment of patient's sleep quality based on data obtained from smartphone's sensors.
Dexmedetomidine or remifentanil are effective in attenuating cough during peri-extubation period after general anesthesia. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of dexmedetomidine on the remifentanil concentration for the cough suppression during anesthetic emergence.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover, dose escalation study of bradanicline in subjects with chronic cough
The study aim is to investigate if changes in osmolarity using mannitol challenge can evoke coughing reproducibly in mild allergic asthmatics compared with healthy controls and if salbutamol can affect this. Phase 1 of this study is a reproducibility analysis of cough dose response to mannitol in a cohort of mild allergic asthmatics and healthy controls. Phase 2 is a double-blind, placebo-controlled analysis in mild allergic asthmatics assessing the effects of salbutamol on mannitol induced cough.
Cough in asthma is a very common and troublesome symptom in asthma, which predicts severity and poor prognosis. Previous studies have shown that asthmatics have an exaggerated cough response to capsaicin. Currently available asthma treatment is not designed to target the cough reflex directly, so this presents an unmet need for patients. The treatment being tested in this study is the commercially available over the counter oral probiotic BioGaia® DSM17938. Based on clinical and pre-clinical evidence, it is hypothesized that TRPV1 antagonism with BioGaia® DSM17938 will result in a reduction in capsaicin evoked coughs in patients with asthma.