There are about 11304 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Denmark. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
The study aims to investigate the effects of a service dog on military veterans with post traumatic stress syndrome (PTSD). The investigators will use non-invasive measures of the physiological responses, data obtained via dairy keeping, accelerometer data estimating activity and sleep patterns, and baseline information including psychological measures validated for this specific population.
The aim of the study is to investigate progression in muscle affection in patients with pathogenic variants in the anoctamin 5 gene to: 1. investigate possible progression of disease over time 2. investigate good and reliable outcome measures
The "Intravenous vs. Intraosseous Vascular Access During Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest (IVIO)"-trial is an investigator-initiated, randomized, parallel group, patient and outcome assessor-blinded, superiority trial of intravenous vs. intraosseous vascular access during adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The intraosseous group will be further randomized to humeral vs. tibial access. The trial will be conducted in the Central Denmark Region. The primary outcome will be sustained return of spontaneous circulation, and 762 patients will be included. Key secondary outcomes include survival at 30 days and survival at 30 days with a favorable neurological outcome.
A double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled intervention trial on patients with actinic keratosis.
This study will be a placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized, phase 3 study in participants with Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease (ASCVD) who are not adequately controlled despite maximally tolerated lipid-lowering therapy.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of guselkumab in participants with Crohn's disease.
EUS-FNB samples will be used for organoid cultures, which will be co-cultured with cancer associated fibroblasts derived from the surrounding stroma of the lesion. The organoid cultures will be used for pharmacotyping using relevant chemotherapeutic agents used in the clinic, and the organoid's response compared with the patient's response.
The overall purpose of this study is to describe the cellular composition of the human colon and its gene expression using scRNAseq and scATACseq methods. This will potentially provide is with a detailed map of the colon aiding our understanding of how diseases of the colon develop as well as the colons influence on systemic diseases such as type II diabetes.
The aim of the present project is to implement smoking cessation support in hospital-based lung cancer workup. The effect on 1) patients' smoking cessation attempts, motivation, quality of life and psychosocial consequences of lung cancer workup as well as 2) hospitals' number of referrals to municipality-based smoking cessation programmes will be evaluated in a pragmatic, cluster-randomised controlled setup, where participating hospitals will be assigned to the intervention arm (implementation of smoking cessation support) or the control arm (usual practice). Patients' and healthcare professionals' experiences with and barriers towards smoking cessation support will be explored in an interview-based, qualitative study.
The present project aims to investigate the interaction between training-induced blood volume expansion (plasma- and red blood cell volume responses), central as well as peripheral cardio-vascular adaptations. We will investigate cardiovascular responses through one year of training in recreationally active men and women as well as endurance athletes undertaking shorter training-periods/interventions with environmental heat-stress. The overall purpose with the project is to investigate the physiological effects of prolonged aerobic exercise on central cardiovascular parameters and peripheral effects in the muscle tissue in untrained individuals. Further, we want to compare these effects to exposure to environmental stress (heat) on performance well trained individuals. The present study consist of three parts using the same methodology in different populations to elucidate the above mentioned mechanisms. The first part is a larger training intervention in untrained/recreationally active men and women aiming at evaluating the initial cardiovascular adaptations to an exercise training regimen. In addition there are two parts aimed to elucidate the mechanisms leading to further improvements in cardiovascular and blood volume adaptations from exercise training in a different environmental condition and artificially elevated PV in already highly adapted endurance athletes.