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NCT ID: NCT05160766 Completed - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Assessing Immune Response of Different COVID-19 Vaccines in Older Adults

EU-COVAT-1
Start date: November 8, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomised controlled, adaptive, multicentre Phase II protocol evaluating different booster strategies in individuals aged 75 years and older already vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2. Part B of this trial foresees testing of different vaccines as a 4th vaccination dose (second booster) for comparative assessment of their immunogenicity and safety against SARSCoV- 2 wild-type and variants in the elderly, a usually neglected population. Additional vaccines and extended follow-up visits can be added through amendments of this sub-protocol. As stated in the EU-COVAT master protocol, this trial, i.e., the EU-COVAT-1_AGED study, implements a specific safety monitoring strategy (see below). Cohorts and arms can be withdrawn or added as deemed necessary according to the criteria specified in this protocol

NCT ID: NCT05150418 Completed - Hypovolemia Clinical Trials

Supplemental Oxygen in Hypovolemia

Start date: November 26, 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Supplemental oxygen is frequently administered in acutely and critically ill patients, specifically, it is often administered in trauma patients to avoid arterial hypoxemia and tissue hypoxia. There is also an increasing focus on potentially deleterious effects of hyperoxia. Further, the hemodynamic response to hyperoxia in hypovolemia is poorly understood. The present study aims to investigate the effects of supplemental oxygen on systemic and cerebral hemodynamics in simulated hypovolemia in healthy volunteers.

NCT ID: NCT05150171 Completed - Hand Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Happy Hands E-self-management Pilot Study

Start date: November 23, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This pilot study will assess usability of a e-self-management program for patients with hand osteoarthritis through the Happy Hands app. People with hand osteoarthritis will be recruited for the study. The e-self-management intervention consists of informational videos and videos of hand exercises and has a duration of 12 weeks. Patient-reported outcomes and grip strength will be collected before and after the 12 week intervention period. Change in pain, stiffness, grip strength, disease activity and quality indicators will be assessed after 12 weeks.

NCT ID: NCT05149092 Completed - Abdominal Obesity Clinical Trials

Effects of Chicken Protein Hydrolysate (CPH) Supplementation in People With High Waist Circumference

CHICKPEP
Start date: January 18, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this randomized, placebo controlled, double blind trial, effects of relatively high doses of chicken protein hydrolysate (CPH) or casein hydrolysate (placebo) supplementation will be investigate in healthy persons with abdominal obesity. The 12-week study examines potential effects on body weight, abdominal obesity, body composition, plasma parameters of metabolic health including lipids, inflammatory parameters, redox state and microbiota biomarkers.

NCT ID: NCT05149079 Completed - Healthy Diet Clinical Trials

Effects of a Marine Protein Hydrolysate in Healthy Adults

MARPEP
Start date: February 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized, double blind, controlled trial investigates changes in the cardiovascular index (triacylglycerol/HDL-cholesterol × waist/hip ratio) after 12 weeks of marine protein hydrolysate (MPH) or whey protein powder (placebo) supplementation in adult healthy persons. Additionally, the study investigates potential effects on plasma parameters of metabolic health including lipids, glucose, inflammatory parameters and redox state, as well as associations between dietary MPH and body weight, abdominal obesity, body composition, and gut microbiota composition. Finally, putative end-products of diet-microbial interactions (TMAO and short-chain fatty acids) with CVD risk factors and biomarkers of mitochondrial function are examined.

NCT ID: NCT05144048 Completed - Induction of Labor Clinical Trials

Outpatient Induction of Labor With Oral Misoprostol

Start date: January 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Induction of labor is an increasingly used intervention in obstetrics due to expanding indications, which more often includes relatively healthy women with uncomplicated pregnancies. While induction of labor traditionally is offered in an inpatient setting, a shift towards an outpatient setting is increasing despite insufficient evidence regarding safety and effectiveness. Oral misoprostol is easy for the pregnant women to administer and the risk of uterine hyperstimulation with fetal heart rate changes is found to be low. Strong evidence concludes that oral misoprostol is preferable as an induction agent and is recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). The investigators will perform a multicenter randomized-controlled trial comparing labor induction in an outpatient versus inpatient setting, aiming to increase knowledge on outpatient induction of labor with oral misoprostol. The study is based on experiences and findings from a recently performed pilot trial and targets a large group of relatively healthy pregnant women where induction of labor is decided. The investigators hypothesize that women induced in an outpatient setting will be more satisfied than women induced in an inpatient setting.

NCT ID: NCT05137184 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

A Comparison of Three Regimens of Acute Pain Management: Methoxyflurane; Intranasal Fentanyl; Intravenous Morphine

PreMeFen
Start date: November 12, 2021
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The study rationale is to provide evidence for early, safe and effective pain management in the ambulance service with non-invasive and fast acting analgesics. Low-dose methoxyflurane and intranasal fentanyl are non-invasive medications that are well-suited for use by ambulance personnel under difficult pre-hospital settings. This is a randomized, controlled, open label, three-arm, non-inferiority, phase 3 drug trial performed in the ambulance service. The randomization will be 1:1:1 to the three treatment groups. Patients 18 years or older with acute pain with Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) ≥4 with normal physiology and capable of giving informed consent will be included null hypothesis (H0) (tested in hierarchic order a-b-c): 1. Methoxyflurane regimen is inferior to intranasal fentanyl regimen or 2. Methoxyflurane regimen is inferior to IV morphine regimen or 3. Intranasal fentanyl regimen is inferior to IV morphine regimen for treating moderate to severe pain, measured by reduction in Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) 10 minutes after administration. The study duration for each participant will be from ambulance scene arrival to patient handover in emergency department. Number of participants: Patient enrolment until successful inclusion of 270 per protocol patients. Primary endpoint is change in NRS from before administration (t0) to 10 minutes after start of administration (t10). The study intervention is one of the three IMPs: - Methoxyflurane: 3 ml inhalation, can be repeated once to a total dose of 6 ml. - Fentanyl intranasal spray: 100 µg IntraNasal, (patients >70 years 50 µg), can be repeated to maximum total dose 500 µg IN. - Morphine hydrochloride intravenous: 0.1 mg/kg IV (patients >70 years or fragile 0.05 mg/kg IV), can be repeated to a maximum total dose 0.5 mg/kg IV. Rescue analgesia is all analgesics other than the allocated IMP. If rescue medication is administered before the assessment of primary endpoint at 10 minutes, the patient will not be part of the per-protocol analysis. The hypothesis will be tested and the primary endpoint will be evaluated by the 95% confidence limits (95% CI), and a conclusion of non-inferiority will be made if the 95% CI of the estimated treatment difference fully lie within the inferiority margin. Non-inferiority is determined on the basis of a 1-sided equivalence t test on the per protocol population and confirmed, for sensitivity reasons, on the modified intention to treat population.

NCT ID: NCT05129358 Completed - Dehydration Clinical Trials

Testing of an Electronic Patch During Mild Dehydration

Start date: May 30, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to investigate the ability of a wearable bioimpedance sensor to detect mild dehydration in healthy volunteers following the administration of Furosemide. In addition, the study will investigate changes in bioimpedance related to normal variation in tissue hydration (circadian changes, skin thickness, posture, and moderate activity). The study will also provide information on the durability of the sensor.

NCT ID: NCT05128019 Completed - Clinical trials for Subjective Health Complaint

Use of the Individual Challenge Inventory Tool (ICIT) by General Practitioners

ICIT
Start date: March 7, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Many patients in general practice present symptoms that do not refer to specific pathology. We refer to these patients at Medical Unexplained Physical Symptoms (MUPS). Practice and research have well documented that these patients frustrate most General Practitioners (GPs). They also produce a lot of unnecessary investigations and are overrepresented on sick-listing. The conversational tool Individual Challenge Inventory Tool (ICIT) offers an aid for the GPS to the consultation and aims to increase the patients' coping abilities with their health challenges. The aim of the study is to investigate whether patients experience such increased coping following a session of consultations with their GP based on ICIT.

NCT ID: NCT05121649 Completed - Emergencies Clinical Trials

Video-instructed First Aid in Emergency Medical Call Centers

Start date: November 8, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Video streaming as an additional tool to telephone was introduced in some Norwegian emergency medical call centers during the spring of 2020. This allows the dispatchers to communicate with the caller through video streaming during emergency calls. Some studies are conducted on this use of video streaming, but further research is needed. In this study, the investigators have chosen to focus on potential effect from video streaming on bystander first aid for injured patients. The investigators have knowledge from preliminary results that dispatchers often find video streaming useful in emergency calls regarding injuries. This study will investigate whether the use of video streaming might have an effect on the recognition rate by dispatchers on the need for bystander first aid for injured patients. In addition, the investigators will investigate whether video-instructions from dispatcher can improve bystander first aid quality. The investigators will be using data collected by ambulance personnel including patients with injuries, as well as data from EMCC journals and audio logs.