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Dyspnea clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Dyspnea.

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NCT ID: NCT05326802 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Diseases

The U.S. Embryologist Fatigue Study

FUSE
Start date: April 7, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of the study is to determine physical and mental health issues of U.S. embryologists related to their occupational characteristics, and how workplace fatigue and burnout may affect their quality of life, cynicism, interactions with patients, attention to detail, and lead to human error, the cause of the most severe IVF incidents that often make headlines and result in costly litigation. It will also correlate how the current manual workflows contribute to these health issues, and what measures can be taken to improve both working conditions and embryologists' health, and, therefore, improve patient care.

NCT ID: NCT05319379 Terminated - Dyspnea Clinical Trials

Clinician Assessment of Patient Dyspnea

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Background: Dyspnea, like pain, is subjective and challenging to assess despite the large number of patients that report shortness of breath. Several studies have shown that physicians and nurses inaccurately assess patient dyspnea. Since respiratory therapists care for many patients at risk for dyspnea, an evaluation of their abilities to evaluate dyspnea is needed. Thus, the plan is to evaluate respiratory therapists' ability to assess a patient's dyspnea level, in addition to nurses and physicians. Methods: This is a prospective study to evaluate the agreement between dyspnea assessment by a patient and respiratory therapist, nurses, and physicians. The primary aim of this study will be to evaluate clinician ability to assess a patients dyspnea level. The secondary aim of this study is to identify patient characteristics that might influence clinician ability to assess dyspnea.

NCT ID: NCT05304793 Completed - Clinical trials for Lung Non-Small Cell Carcinoma

Testing a Cognitive Behavioral Model for Reducing Dyspnea in Patients With Lung Cancer

Start date: July 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This trial studies the effect of a form of cognitive-behavioral therapy, Take a Breath, on reducing the intensity and frequency of dyspnea (difficulty breathing) in patients with lung cancer. Take a Breath consists of individual therapy sessions that educate patients on dyspnea and provides coping strategies.

NCT ID: NCT05304494 Withdrawn - Asthma Clinical Trials

Sentinel - Triaging Acute Breathlessness Using Multi-Modal Biomarkers

Start date: March 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Sentinel-001 study aims to identify a combination of biomarkers suitable for triage of breathlessness.

NCT ID: NCT05267418 Terminated - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Effects of Automated Oxygen Titration Alone or With High Flow Nasal Therapy on Dyspnea and Exercise Tolerance

Start date: February 26, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of automated oxygen administration (FreeO2 system) alone or with high-flow oxygen on dyspnea and exercise tolerance in people with desaturating chronic lung disease compared to fixed oxygen therapy.

NCT ID: NCT05257850 Recruiting - Cancer Clinical Trials

Management of Breathlessness With High-flow Nasal Therapy or a Fan

Start date: April 26, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Airflow directed to the face by a fan is shown to relief breathlessness in palliative care and some studies have suggested High-Flow nasal airflow therapy beneficial as well. However, these two treatments have not been compared. 40 patients with advanced cancer and breathlessness are recruited from Tampere University Hospital or Pirkanmaa Hospice. All patients are treated with two therapies: 1. High-Flow nasal airflow therapy with a nasal cannula and 2. airflow directed to the face by a fan. Both treatment periods last 30 minutes or as long as the patient wish to use the therapy. The effects of the therapies on breathlessness are compared by asking the subjective relief of breathlessness after each therapies. The study do not limit any other therapies used in the normal clinical care for the patients. Thus, all the other therapies the physicians taking care of the patient orders are permitted. Hopefully, the patients achieve relief for their breathlessness through the study treatments given in addition to their normal treatment. There are no significant risks related to the therapies, but they may cause some inconveniences such as mouth dryness. These possible side-effects of the therapies are asked as well.

NCT ID: NCT05231512 Completed - Dyspnea Clinical Trials

The Effects of a Music Therapy Respiratory Protocol on Post-Covid-19 Respiratory Symptoms

Start date: January 13, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The effects of a tested and published music therapy respiratory protocol shown to be efficacious with pediatric asthma and adult COPD is being studied with individuals living with post-Covid-19 respiratory symptoms. An interventional, single arm study is being conducted with individuals meeting eligibility criteria detailed below. Primary outcome is a change in the MRC Dyspnea score, with secondary aims focusing on improved quality of life, including reduced fatigue and depression and improved sleep and resilience.

NCT ID: NCT05228678 Not yet recruiting - covid_19 Patients Clinical Trials

Persistent Dyspnea in Post COVID_19 and Pulmonary Function

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

COVID-19 has a high spread rate, millions of people have been infected around the world. Patients complained of different symptoms as fever, dry cough and fatigue which is mild in about 80% of cases, but the severity of the case may progress to develop a respiratory distress or respiratory failure, which may require the need for intensive care unit (ICU)

NCT ID: NCT05222295 Completed - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

The Effectiveness Pulmonary Telerehabilitation and Cognitive Telerehabilitation in COPD Patients

Start date: January 31, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of our study is to compare the effectiveness of the supervized pulmonary telerehabilitation program and the cognitive telerehabilitation method, which includes pulmonary telerehabilitation methods, in patients with severe stage COPD who have difficulty exercising heavily. The effects of pulmonary and cognitive rehabilitation on dyspnea, muscle strength, functional capacity, quality of life, anxiety and depression levels in this patient group will be examined. The number of studies in the literature in which the pulmonary rehabilitation program was applied as telerehabilitation is insufficient. Considering that this patient group is not motivated and has difficulty in exercising, motor imagery and movement observation methods from cognitive rehabilitation methods may be alternative methods for these patients. Although these methods have been very popular in recent years in terms of researching and demonstrating their effectiveness in various patient groups in the literature, no study has been found in which the effects of these methods have been applied in pulmonary disease groups. This study aims to contribute to the serious gap in the literature on the application of pulmonary telerehabilitation and its effectiveness, and to be an original study by investigating the effectiveness of motor imagery and action observation, which are popular rehabilitation methods of recent years, in COPD patients in the pulmonary disease group for the first time.

NCT ID: NCT05163275 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Dyspnea Invasive Mechanical Ventilation-associated

Dyspnea Facial Recognition During Weaning

DYS-FEREA
Start date: July 20, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Critically ill patients are exposed to many sources of discomfort and traumatic experiences, especially if they require invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV). Dyspnea, or sensation of "not getting enough air - suffocation" is the most common and distressing symptom experienced by IMV patients, far more unpleasant than pain. But, contrarily to pain, dyspnea has received only little attention and is still markedly under-recognized in IMV patients. Moreover, given the deleterious short- and long-terms consequences of letting IMV patients with dyspnea, its assessment and treatment figures among the main next great cause in critical healthcare. However, dyspnea assessment in IMV patients is a challenge since many of them cannot express their suffering (e.g. sedative drugs, mouth tubes). Dyspnea observation scales (DOS) are promising alternatives that allow to strongly suspecting dyspnea. These scales encompass the dyspnea multidimensionality assessing the respiratory drive (respiratory rate, excessive use neck muscle, nasal flaring), neurovegetative signs (heart rate) and emotions (fearful face). DOS allows calculation of scores strongly correlated with dyspnea in IMV communicative patients and responsive to dyspnea treatment even in noncommunicative ones. However these scales (1) require human resources, (2) still elicit caregivers' subjectivity (fearful face), and (3) are discontinuous, whereas dyspnea is unpredictable, and thus may lead to false appreciation of clinical deterioration. Thus there is an urgent unmet need for technology-enhanced clinical surveillance tools that reliably detect dyspnea in IMV patients and tailor its relief. Infrared thermal imaging (IRTI) offers a unique opportunity to automatically and continuously compute DOS. Indeed, it has been demonstrated as reliable to measure heart and respiratory rate in patients and detect facial expressions even during surgical intervention. The study goal is to prove the concept that IRTI camera device is feasible and reliable to strongly suspect dyspnea, based on the calculation of DOS including heart and respiratory rate, facial expression of fear, and activation of Alae nasi muscle, in IMV patients experiencing an asphyxial threat during a spontaneous breathing trial. The second study goal is to assess the performance of of this multidimensional video taped monitoring to predict the outcome of the spontaneous breathing trial. This project deals with the perspective that artificial intelligence and the development of autonomous patient-machine interfaces will give access to patients' emotions by the analysis of behaviors including facial expressions, in order to improve comfort and reduce traumatic memories of the ICU stay.