View clinical trials related to Diagnosis.
Filter by:This study aims to collect serum samples from healthy non-pregnant women, pregnant women with and without Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM). We will analyze the metabolite changes among the three groups using clinical metabolomics and identify potential biomarkers and metabolic pathways. This study will provide scientific evidence for early clinical diagnosis, prevention, control, and treatment research of GDM.
Globally, tuberculosis (TB) is one of the main causes of death and the leading cause from a single infectious agent. In 2020, an estimated 9.9 million people developed TB and 1.5 million died. Millions of people remain undiagnosed with TB, hindering efforts to end TB. TB tests have inadequate accuracy or performance characteristics for implementation across all populations and settings. None of the tests meet the WHO-Target-Product Profile for TB screening and most need specialized laboratory staff and infrastructure, making them unsuitable for primary health care (PHC). The overall aims for this project are to: 1. Accelerate the introduction/adoption of TB diagnostic tools and test combinations at PHC, for the timely detection of TB and improved linkage to treatment 2. Develop conditions for sustainable and equitable access to TB diagnostics tools and test combinations within PHC, 3. Strengthen global alliances and national partnerships to enable scale-up. The study is split into two major Phases. This application is focused on Phase 1. Specific Phase 1 objectives are to: 4. Evaluate the performance of selected TB diagnostic tools, and 5. Identify TB test combinations that increase the proportion of people diagnosed with bacteriologically confirmed TB. Methods in Brief: Activities will be conducted in Bangladesh, Brazil, Kenya, Cameroon, Malawi, Nigeria, and Vietnam. Each country will study selected priority populations at risk of TB, including adults attending PHC centers and district hospitals; people living with HIV (PLHIV); marginalized populations (internally displaced, refugees and pastoralists), and children. Activities within countries will use standardized protocols for evaluating diagnostic tests and combinations.
Echinococcosis is a severe parasitosis caused by the development of the tapeworm larva Echinococcus multilocularis, responsible for alveolar echinococcosis (AE) or Echinococcus granulosus, responsible for cystic echinococcosis (CE). The treatment is based on surgery (only possible in 30 to 40% of cases) and/or on a benzimidazole antiparasitic treatment, especially albendazole. Albendazole is only parasitostatic, it slows down the development of the parasite but does not kill it. It is often prescribed for life. Monitoring the effectiveness of the treatment is therefore necessary, requiring radiological and serological monitoring once or twice a year. Being a chronic disease whose treatment is not always curative, patients quality of life is impacted, with a high level of anxiety described in some patients. The diagnosis, evoked on radiological arguments, is then confirmed by serological techniques, whose sensitivity for EA diagnosis is good (95%) in the absence of immunosuppression (now observed in 25% of EA patients). Sensitivity is lower for CE diagnosis (70% or even less than 50% in certain clinical forms). Quantitative real-time PCR (QPCR) techniques on blood samples are now used in many infectious pathologies to quantify the circulating DNA load, and improve diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring. The presence of circulating parasitic DNA has been reported in both types of echinococcosis. A new Echinococcus spp.multiplex QPCR technique (QPCR-Echino) allowing the detection of DNA from E. multilocularis and different species of the E. granulosus complex of European occurrence, in different types of biological samples, has recently been developed in the French National Reference Center for Echinococcosis laboratory. The investigators wish to evaluate QPCR-Echino for the detection of DNA in tissues, as well as in blood, for the diagnosis of Echinococcosis. This technique could improve the sensitivity of biological diagnosis, especially in immunocompromised patients, who often experience significant diagnostic delays, and could also provide information on the virulence and viability of the strains involved.
Tuberculosis is the 13th cause of death from all causes, infecting roughly the 25% of the world population, and Ethiopia is listed among the 30 high-burden countries both for TB and for HIV/TB. In recent years, the immediate consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic was a large fall in the number of newly reported TB cases indicators that represent a relevant drawback in the pursue of the 2025 End TB Milestones. For active case investigation of TB close contacts, WHO recently recommended the use of Computer- aided detection (CAD), a technology that can help chest X-ray interpretation in situations of human resources constrains, and it may be cost-effective in low-resource settings. Also, for tuberculosis diagnosis, widely-available GeneXpert on stool samples showed high diagnostic performances in term of both sensitivity and specificity. It is important to assess alternative modalities that could improve diagnosis during TB contact investigation in Ethiopia and the other countries where TB represents a crucial burden.
For diagnosis of external and middle ear diseases, an otoscope is a key instrument to use. A microscope has been used as a reference standard to confirm pathology. An endoscope has been also widely used. Both microscope and endoscope provide an excellent image quality, can record and capture the images, and the images can be visualized with an export system. A digital otoscope is widely available and more affordable. A comparative study of the efficacy of the endoscope and the digital endoscope will be performed.
Objectives: The International Ovarian Tumor Analysis (IOTA) provides a specific terminology for adult ovarian masses, while, currently, there is no systematic classification for preoperative assessment of adnexal lesions in childhood and adolescence. This study aims to survey Italian pediatric surgeons to evaluate ovarian masses' management (from diagnosis to treatment) in patients aged 1-18. Methods: A 27-question survey was distributed. It consisted of questions regarding the management and use of ultrasound and IOTA terminology in diagnosing ovarian masses in childhood and adolescence, in emergency regimes and in planned surgeries.
The goal of this clinical trial is to promote lung cancer screening (LCS) uptake among Hispanic current and former smokers. The main questions it aims to answer are: - What barriers do current and former Hispanic smokers face in the identification and documentation of their smoking status? - How can digital delivery of an educational video promote LCS uptake among current and former Hispanic smokers? Participants will receive an educational video about lung cancer screening and complete brief, self-reported surveys afterwards.
Endometriosis is a frequent pathology with an estimated prevalence of 10% of women of childbearing age. There is no exact correspondence between the symptoms described by the patients and the severity of the lesions, which makes clinical diagnosis difficult. It therefore seems important to improve the complementary examinations available to make the diagnosis more precise and to better study the effectiveness of the treatments implemented. The clinical examination and per-surgical findings of patients with deep pelvic endometriosis show a clear decrease in the mobility of the pelvic organs in relation to each other, but few studies have looked at this mobility, which could however have an implication in explaining the pathophysiology of the disease and the symptomatology of the patients, as well as in the detection of lesions preoperatively. The persistence of hypo-mobility could also help to understand treatment failures.
This study aims to assess the diagnostic performance of a new fast MRI sequence named Neuromix compared to routine clinical MRI for brain tumor in pediatric patients
NIRS estimates tissue saturation of oxygenation in tissue beds. Animals studies suggested that transscrotal NIRS measurements can quantify testicular hypoxia and differentiate between torsed and non torsed testicles. The results of human studies are not conclusive. The hypothesis is that the difference in NIRS values between torsed and healthy testicles would not be zero and that this difference would be zero in control group and that NIRS could help to detect rapidly a TT Testicular torsion (TT) is a functional emergency. The diagnosis is sometimes difficult to make. No paraclinical examination can eliminate it with certainty. The investigators aimed to evaluate the interest of transscrotal near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) for the diagnosis of TT of child