View clinical trials related to Fever.
Filter by:Physical abilities of teenagers with familial Mediterranean fever
Fever represents the main cause of admission to the emergency room in older people pediatric. It occurs in the presence of a wide range of pathologies, from infectious forms (the most common, viral or bacterial) up to more complex and/or systemic forms (such as inflammatory or neoplastic ones). The drugs currently indicated for the management of fever in children are: paracetamol and ibuprofen. There are no recent studies conducted in pediatric population, who have demonstrated the greater effectiveness of therapy with paracetamol or ibuprofen, The objective of our study is, therefore, to identify which therapy is most appropriate for controlling body temperature e of associated symptoms in pediatric patients arriving in the emergency room with fever.
The purpose of this study is to assess the gastrointestinal responses of the elderly during hyperthermia.
This is a randomized controlled human exposure crossover study. Investigators aims to assess the acute effects of high temperature exposure and the underlying mechanisms.
This is a Phase 2, open-label, study evaluating the safety and immunogenicity of the 2-dose vaccination regimen, Ad26.ZEBOV, MVA-BN-Filo, in adults and children originally enrolled in the control arm of the EBOVAC-Salone study
In Uganda, 130,000 children (0-14 years of age) were living with HIV in 2018. Last year, nearly 450 infants acquired HIV every day; most of them during childbirth and these are at extremely high risk of dying in the first two years of life from treatable infections which present with fever. While fevers are commonly attributed to malaria, most fevers in African children are not due to malaria and clinicians are challenged by the similar clinical features of wide spectrum of potential aetiologies. The prevalence of treatable causes of non-malarial febrile illnesses in children in Africa has been reported to be 45%.
VYF03 is a phase II, randomized, parallel-group prevention study with 2 arms, active-controlled (Stamaril), observer-blind, multi-center study to assess the non-inferiority of the immune response, in terms of seroconversion rates of the investigational vaccine candidate vYF to the licensed Stamaril, in adults aged 18 years up to 60 years in Europe (EU). The safety and immunogenicity profile of vYF in a cohort of Asian population of Chinese origin outside of China will also be described. The study will also assess the immunogenicity profiles and the safety profiles of vYF and Stamaril. Participants will be randomized in a 2:1 ratio to receive a single subcutaneous injection of either the vYF vaccine (380 participants in EU and 80 participants of Chinese origin in Asia) or Stamaril (190 participants in EU and 40 participants of Chinese origin in Asia), on Day 01. The duration of each participant's participation will be approximately 5 years.
The primary objective of the study is to demonstrate the non-inferiority of the antibody response in terms of seroconversion rate 28 days after vaccine administration of one dose of yellow fever vaccine (vYF) compared to the antibody response after one dose of the YF-VAX control vaccine in yellow fever naïve participants. The secondary objectives of the study are: - To describe the immune response to yellow fever in both vaccine groups before and after vYF or YF-VAX administration. - To describe the safety profile of vYF vaccine in comparison to the safety profile of the control YF-VAX. - To describe the biosafety profile of vYF in comparison to the biosafety profile of the control YF-VAX.
COVID Related Study. This study will compare the Thales High Temperature Detection (HTD) system with the two routinely used temperature measurement systems (tympanic and forehead) in patients and staff in the Emergency Department. The aims of the study are: - To determine the diagnostic accuracy of HTD for the measurement of fever, using an equivalence comparison with the maximum temperature recorded with two routinely used temperature measurements (tympanic and forehead), margin ±0.2°C. - To determine if skin tone is an independent confounding factor in the measurement of fever using HTD - To establish performance of internal calibration of Thales device - To power for a definitive Clinical Investigation to determine clinical efficacy and safety cut off with HTD If results are encouraging the aim would then be to undertake a clinical investigation in order to get CE marking for use in a clinical setting.
This is a bi-centric prospective observational cohort study of adults and children presenting to the emergency room or outpatient department with community febrile illness (with or without signs of focalization) in 2 clinical sites (hospitals) in the DRC. The study will describe the epidemiology, clinical aspects, severity, management and outcome of febrile illnesses using data collected during routine diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Each patient will be followed for 21 days. The follow-up will include - Daily visits for hospitalized patients, - Telephone calls (or study center visit or home visit) on days 7, 14 and 21 for outpatients and discharged patients. The study has been amended (EC UZA approval in June 2021) to perform a set of laboratory analyses in the partners institutions and at the ITM. We aim as a new primary objective at describing the profile of different biomarkers (C-reactive protein and white blood cell count with differentiation) in participants enrolled with febrile illness, and as secondary objectives to correlate them with outcome (assessed at day 21) and with several etiological diagnoses, especially malaria (as assessed by rapid diagnostic test and blood smear). The purpose is to investigate the potential diagnostic and prognostic value of these biomarkers which are increasingly available at the point-of-care.