View clinical trials related to Dyspnea.
Filter by:The former aim of this study is to determine whether the arm swings change in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) according to healthy subjects. The latter purposes to investigate the correlation between balance parameters and arm swing, how to change arm swing according to severity of the disease, and to determine the relationship between balance and the severity of disease, the relationship of posture both arm swing and severity of disease in patients with COPD. In accordance with this purposes, 20 patients with COPD who have Global Initiative for Chronic Obstruction Lung Disease (GOLD) stage 1-2-3 and 20 healthy controls will be included between the ages of 40 and 65, respectively. Tests and questionnaires will be used in order to determine the severity of COPD and to evaluate posture. Berg Balance Scale, Time Up and Go Test, 6 Minute Pegboard and Ring Test, 6 Minute Walk Test and gait analysis will be performed. It is expected that by determining the parameters that can be affected by severity of COPD. It is estimate to have information about severity of the disease by means of observational analysis. It will guide professional working in the field.
Recruitment target: Phase I: Co-design of intervention: 5 to 15 CYP aged between 12-18 years of age referred to the pan-London long COVID MDT. Phase II: Randomised pilot: 40 patients (12-18 years) will be recruited from a potential pool of 214 patients referred to the pan-London long COVID MDT. Methods: Phase I: Co-design Design and setting The intervention will be co-designed with CYP following a process informed by practice-base evidence, which centres the voices and wisdom of CYP, focuses on creativity and playfulness, and systemic and narrative approaches. The process will involve: 1) Refining the intentions of key stakeholders (including ways of bringing psychological and physiological principles into the intervention); 2) Participation of CYP; 3) Creativity and playfulness and 4) Responding to feedback (see Salvo et al., 2022). Phase II. Pilot Population: 40 patients (12-18 years) will be recruited from a potential pool of 214 patients referred to the pan-London long COVID MDT. CYP will be randomised to receive either standard treatment or standard treatment plus intervention. Study Treatment Standard treatment consists of virtual MDT discussion with referrer and advice signposting into local services for specific issues. They are sent leaflets and information. If a patient is severely affected enough to be seen face to face, they are offered an interdisciplinary consultation, and tailored input from therapies and psychological services. Access to bite size videos and leaflets covering the following topics: sleep, pacing, activity management, school reintegration, managing friendships, eating well and emotional wellbeing. Young people are invited to a single virtual group Q&A session to bring any queries after watching the videos. The leaflets and online sessions have been developed by professionals from the Evelina, Great Ormond Street Hospital, Imperial, University College London Hospital, and the Whittington. The bite size videos and live sessions are delivered by a clinical psychologist, a dietitian, specialist nurse, occupational therapist, and physiotherapist. More complex or severely affected patients will receive one to one treatment with members of the MDT as required. Intervention Based on clinical expertise and theory, it is anticipated the following elements may be included in the intervention.: - Progressive breathing pattern retraining, including education, self-observation, relaxation, body scanning, postural re-alignment - Identifying the connections between body and mind to address anxiety and breathlessness - Coping skills for managing anxiety using principles from narrative therapy and mindfulness - Online materials to improve self-efficacy with home practice - Social connection with other CYP for peer support, and resource sharing - Activities to help CYP reconnect with their usual activities, skills, abilities, interests, support systems
The POCUS PATHWAY-trial is a multi-center, randomized, investigator-initiated, open labelled, pragmatic, controlled trial of a point-of-care ultrasound-driven diagnostic pathway vs standard diagnostic pathway in dyspneic emergency department patients. The primary outcome will be 24-hour hospital stay and 642 patients will be included. Key secondary outcomes include overall hospital length of stay, image resources, and 72-hour revisits.
Our study aiming to look in improvement of Pediatric Respiratory Assessment Measure (PRAM) score as a primary outcome. The secondary outcomes involving the need for second step management, need for admission and possible side effects. It's double blinded randomized control study comparing Nebulized Epinephrine with standard treatment (salbutamol + Ipratropium) versus the standard treatment only in pediatric patient. A pilot study will be conducted before to detect the sample size required and data will be collected at deferent interval post treatment targeting intension to treat for analysis.
Evaluating the capability and efficiency of transthoracic ultrasound in attempting to identify the etiology of acute dyspnea.
The purpose of this study is to see if the front part of the brain called the "Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex" (DLPFC) has a role in our ability to feel breathlessness. The experiment will use a device that sits on the top of the head which produces a magnetic field that penetrates the scalp and excites the brain tissue directly under it. This procedure is called repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), it is a painless procedure and known to be safe in healthy individuals. Previous research has shown that the pain felt when capsaicin, the active ingredient in 'chilli' powder, is applied to the hand is reduced by applying the rTMS on the scalp directly above the DLPFC part of the brain. In this experiment we want to see if breathlessness is also reduced. We will use a breathing task that will generate a moderate amount of breathlessness by adding a small amount of carbon dioxide to the inhaled air, while preventing the increase in the amount of breathing we would normally see in response to this. If we find that breathlessness produced by this breathing task is reduced after rTMS over the DLPFC, this may lead to new drugs that target this part of the brain in patients suffering from breathlessness due to heart or lung disease. The study will also improve our knowledge of how the brain enables us to feel breathlessness
This study will be a Randomized controlled and will be conducted in Allied Hospital, Faisalabad. The study will be completed within the duration of 10 months. Convenience sampling study technique will be used to collect the data. The sample size of 30 patients will be taken in this study to find the effect of flutter and PEP mask therapy on chest clearance and dyspnea. Patients will be allocated randomly in two groups and 15 patients in each group. Group A will get flutter device therapy. Group B will get PEP mask treatment. A regular follow up visits to department and a final assessment was made at the end of last week by using questionnaire and resulting improvement was shown in results after completion. Data will be analyzed on SPSS25.
This randomized clinical trial aims to evaluate patients with decompensated heart failure undergoing an early mobilization protocol with the use of immersive virtual reality glasses compared with patients undergoing the same protocol but without immersive virtual reality. The primary outcome will be the sensation of difficulty breathing, and the secondary outcome will be whether this technology provided a positive experience for patients in the intervention group that was superior to that of patients in the control group.
The aim of this study is to identify correlations between change from the baseline at Month 24 in Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) (% predicted and mL) and change from the baseline at Month 24 in cough or dyspnoea scores [points] as measured in the living with pulmonary fibrosis questionnaire (L-PF) over 24 months of nintedanib treatment in patients with connective tissues disease-associated progressive fibrosing interstitial lung disease (CTD associated PF-ILD) under routine clinical practice conditions in Greece.
There is no specific tool existing to describe dyspnea in children in a multidimensional way. It has been shown in adult studies that multidimensional dyspnea evaluation scales are well correlated to quality of life and respiratory function impairments. The investigators hypothesis is that using multidimensional dyspnea evaluation scales could allow for a more systematic and precise evaluation of this symptom in children, thus improving management and follow-up of patients presenting with acute (asthma attack, infectious diseases) and chronic (cystic fibrosis, primary ciliary diskynesia, neuromuscular diseases) respiratory insufficiency.