View clinical trials related to Dyspnea; Asthmatic.
Filter by:Dyspnea is among the most common symptoms in patients with respiratory diseases such as Asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), Fibrosis, and Pulmonary Hypertension. However, the pathophysiology and underlying mechanisms of dyspnea in patients with respiratory diseases are still poorly understood. Diaphragm dysfunction might be highly prevalent in patients with dyspnea and respiratory diseases. The association of diaphragm function and potential prognostic significance in patients with respiratory diseases has not yet been investigated.
Guidelines suggests that asthma should not be treated prior to a reversibility test and/or an assessment with peak expiratory flow (PEF) unless there is a clinical urgency for the patient to be treated. Approximately one third of patients with diagnosed asthma can safely step-wise withdraw their asthma medication and diagnosis based on repeated objective lung function measurements. AsthmaTuner is CE-marked and provides doctors and nurses with information on patient spirometry incl. reversibility test and diurnal or weekly variability of PEF in relation perceived symptoms. Thereby, digital supported asthma care with AsthmaTuner can improve objective diagnosis of asthma. The objectives of this study are to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity to establish objective asthma diagnosis with spirometry including reversibility test and PEF-monitoring with AsthmaTuner, and secondary, assess the number of asthma patients with objective verified asthma diagnosis with use of spirometry including reversibility test and/or periodic variability with PEF/FEV1 between traditional trial treatment and treatment with AsthmaTuner. At least 146 patients will be included who are at least six years old, with respiratory symptoms that can be signed to asthma last month or with physician-diagnosed asthma last five years without intake of anti-inflammatory treatment in the last three months. This is a randomised controlled trial evaluating a diagnostic two step algorithm that firstly includes dynamic spirometry with a reversibility test and PEF/FEV1 monitoring with AsthmaTuner during 2-4 weeks, and secondly randomization to traditional trial treatment with dynamic spirometry with a reversibility test, or AsthmaTuner incl. PEF/FEV1 monitoring during trial treatment. We plan to include in total 146 patients in primary care with either undiagnosed asthma having respiratory symptoms that can be signed to asthma last month, or patients with a asthma diagnosis last 5 years but no intake of regular anti-inflammatory asthma medication last 3 months. The study start in early 2021 and finish in 2023.