View clinical trials related to Dyspnea.
Filter by:Acute heart failure is a common reason for emergency department visits and hospitalization, but the diagnosis can be challenging because of non-specific symptoms and signs. The current diagnostic approach to acute heart failure has modest accuracy, leading to delayed diagnosis and treatment, which associate with worse prognosis. Prior work suggests diagnostic accuracy can be improved with the addition of multiple circulating biomarkers discovered through proteomics, and this study will derive and validate a multi-marker model to improve diagnostic accuracy for acute heart failure in the emergency department.
The Investigators plan a single center study to get preliminary data to answer a number of fundamental questions directly related to management of COPD. The research will determine whether ventilation heterogeneity and distribution of ventilation inform, determine, assist or drive the: 1) status or clinical course in patients with COPD, 2) understanding of factors associated with activities of daily living and quality of life in patients , 3) risk of exacerbation or hospitalization in those with COPD, and 4) predictors of therapeutic pathway or treatment regime.
Dyspnea is a distressing symptom with pain like perception. The object of study is to translate a tool that measure overall dyspnea severity. Although many scales are available to assess dyspnea but D12 is a clear reliable scale and is use full in clinical practice to assess dyspnea in terms of intensity, quality and emotional response.
Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are prone to breathlessness, chest tightness and other anxiety-inducing symptoms. Medical therapy for the condition focus on improving these symptoms and preventing exacerbations. However, as the disease progresses, pharmacological therapies become less and less effective. Patients with advanced COPD often feel less benefit from the treatment in terms of relief from their symptoms and relief from anxiety about their breathing. Hypnosis is known to induce immediate changes in how a person thinks and experiences their body. These changes can break vicious cycles of anxiety. Hypnosis has already been used successfully people with breathing problems to reduce anxiety and improve breathing. This trial aims to investigate the effect of hypnosis as a complementary technique for the self-management of breathlessness and anxiety during a Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program (PRP). As a secondary measure, the investigators aim to uncover whether the use of self-hypnosis remains useful during the three months following the PRP, after discharge from hospital.
Longitudinal prospective exploratory study on the evolution of dyspnea, in its sensory and affective dimensions, in patients followed for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), between inclusion and a 6-month evaluation
The physiological derangements in subjects suffering from long-term symptoms following a Covid-19 infection (Post-COVID-19 Syndrome) are poorly understood and evaluated. This study will recruit subjects with a clinical diagnosis of Post-Covid-19-syndrome) who are scheduled for either of lung function testing, cardiopulmonary exercise testing or cardiac ultrasound. Patients' symptoms will be correlated to physiological measures and compared to predicted values. In addition, in 20 patients, symptoms and physiological measures will be correlated to epigenetical alterations, or DNA-methylation patterns. In addition, a subset of patients will be examined a year after the baseline testing in order to follow the progress of the disease.
Further knowledge regarding sequelae in severe COVID-19 patients who have required ICU admission for invasive mechanical ventilation is still needed. Available evidence suggests ongoing respiratory impairment and impact in quality of life.
The present COVID-19 Virtual Reality (COVVR) clinical study is performed to test the hypothesis that an immersive virtual reality (iVR)-based Digital Therapeutics (DTx), would alleviate dyspnea by improving breathing comfort in patients recovering from COVID-19 pneumonia presenting with persistent dyspnea. We will further evaluate participants' perceived awareness of and agency over their breathing movements. Finally, we will track patients' perceived benefits related to the iVR intervention and the feasibility of using COVVR in the clinic or at home.
This study will explore why some multiple myeloma patients who receive carfilzomib (an anti-cancer medication) experience shortness of breath while others do not. The purpose of this research is to gather information on the effectiveness of the EndoPAT device, which is FDA-approved to assess the health of a patient's blood vessels. These assessments will help doctors leading the study determine the reasons why patients may develop shortness of breath (dyspnea) when being treated with carfilzomib and ways to better prevent this shortness of breath.
This study is to explore with a feasibility and functionality test the potential of the Ada DDSS prototype with cases of dyspnea patients using the data collected at the Emergency Department (ED) and the ward of Internal medicine of the University Hospital Basel.