There are about 2333 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Ireland. 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.
This study will explore and map the potential shifts in vaginal microbiomes as a consequence of a microbial intervention with product FB101 in healthy, asymptomatic volunteer women screened to have vaginal dysbiosis based on criteria defined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis of a vaginal swab sample.
The study investigates the effects of probiotics in a young healthy population experiencing stress during a stress challenge, i.e. The Trier Social Stress Test (TSST).
Regional anaesthetic techniques, or nerve blocks, are commonly used to provide postoperative pain relief for patients undergoing surgery. At present in University Hospital Galway, it is standard practice for patients undergoing bariatric sleeve gastrectomy surgery to receive a regional anaesthetic technique to improve their postoperative pain. There are a number of different regional anaesthetic options available for this surgery, but as yet, published evidence regarding which specific approach confers most benefit for patients is lacking. This study aims to compare two regional anaesthetic techniques - erector spinae plane blockade versus serratus anterior plane blockade plus subcostal transversus abdominus plane blockade - and assess if one approach provides a superior quality of recovery postoperatively for sleeve gastrectomy patients over the other.
To describe the effectiveness, treatment patterns, quality of life, and safety of participants with moderately or severely active UC treated with filgotinib in a real-world setting.
FREEDOM is a multicentre, open-label, single-arm, phase 3b study in Europe that aims to enrol approximately 90 previously treated severe haemophilia A patients aged ≥12 years, currently on prophylaxis. After a run-in period of 30-45 days, patients will receive efanesoctocog alfa prophylaxis, 50 IU/kg once-weekly for 24 months (additional preventive dose not permitted). An activity tracker and an electronic patient diary will be used to collect data on physical activity, bleeds, factor dosing, pain, and injuries from screening throughout the study. The primary objective is to describe changes in physical activities over 24 months on efanesoctocog alfa prophylaxis, with a primary endpoint of change from baseline in International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) at month 24. Secondary objectives include relationship between physical activity and other variables (bleeds, joint status, pain, injuries, and quality of life); changes in joint status as assessed by HEAD-US, HJHS and MRI; occurrence of bleeds, injuries, pain. Safety and tolerability of efanesoctocog alfa will also be evaluated.
This study will recruit women over the age of 18 with a current or prior cancer diagnosis who have clinical insomnia. This study will examine the efficacy of digital cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (dCBT-I) compared to sleep hygiene education.
Toe amputation is a commonly performed operation for infection and/or ischaemia (tissue death due to lack of blood flow). However, a large number of patients having this surgery ultimately require further amputation due to poor wound healing, new infections and/or new ulcers. Research to date has focused on patient-related factors associated with poor wound healing (e.g. diabetes, lack of blood flow, poor kidney function). However, there is no research looking at the technical surgical aspects of the procedure, specifically how the toe bone is cut. For this feasibility study, we will recruit forty patients whom a consultant vascular surgeon has decided requires amputation of one-to-two adjacent toes. The participants will be randomised by a computer model into one of the two metatarsal transection methods (bone cutters or bone saw) and the rest of the procedure will be carried out in the standard fashion. Patients and assessors will be blinded to which transection method is chosen. Patients will undergo a post-operative foot x-ray to assess for bone fragments within 48 hours of surgery and another at six months to assess for bone healing. Patients will be asked to rate their pain in the post-operative period using the verbal rating score. Patients will be followed after discharge from hospital by their public health nurse, as is standard practice, with regular follow-up in the surgical outpatients to assess wound progress. Patients will be asked to rate their quality of life at six weeks and six months post-operatively. These assessments will be coordinated with their routine post-operative follow-up clinic appointments, so as not to inconvenience patients with supernumerary visits.
The goal of this intervention study (clinical trial) is to investigate the effect of colon-delivered Riboflavin (vitamin B2) on the faecal microbial composition and diversity in older healthy subjects (50 -70 years of age)
Our bodies are home to millions and millions of microbes (bacteria, fungi and viruses), that live in harmony with us without producing any negative (disease producing) effects. Research is beginning to show that these microbes interact with us to help with our immune system, digestive tract and brain development among many other effects. This community of microbes, known collectively as our microbiome, may commence colonisation while we are developing in the womb and becomes quickly established after we are born. Much remains unknown about how preterm birth affects the development of our microbiome. The goal of this longitudinal observational study is to gather more information of how and from where we get those first few microbes, the pattern in which our microbiome develops, and how intensive care for a preterm baby affects this. The main questions it aims to answer are: - How is the gut microbiome of a very premature infant affected by clinical management practices (e.g. antibiotics, probiotics, feeding) and how does it progress subsequently. - How do probiotics colonise the preterm gut, and how do they persist once supplementation is discontinued. Samples will be collected from mothers and their infants during the NICU admission including: - A rectal swab - Meconium and stool - Urine - Blood - Expressed breastmilk - Maternal stool - Maternal oral swab - Maternal vaginal or skin swab (depending on mode of delivery) Samples will be analysed using next generation sequencing techniques to, for example, evaluate microbial composition of the samples or determine functional microbiome-host interactions.
This cross-sectional study aims to ascertain the mechanical properties of human carotid/femoral atherosclerotic plaque and abdominal aortic aneurysm tissue and correlate tissue mechanics with novel blood-based biomarkers of cardiovascular calcification.