View clinical trials related to Hypoxia.
Filter by:This study aims to assess the effect of two drugs for the treatment of chronic mountain sickness in highlanders.
The primary purpose of this observational study was to determine if pRBC transfusions decrease the frequency of intermittent hypoxia events in very low birth weight infants (VLBW) during the first six weeks of life. The impact on non-pRBC transfusions on the frequency of intermittent hypoxia was also assessed.
The aim of this study to evaluate the patients who underwent controlled hypotensive anesthesia under standardized depth of anesthesia with total intravenous anesthesia or inhalation anesthesia; preoperative and 30. ,60. ,120. second of intraoperative period blood HIF 1a, TAS, TOS measurement and to investigate tissue hypoxia secondary to hypotensive anesthesia and the changes of the mediators at the tissue level and which hypotensive anesthesia technique is related.
The investigators designed a cross-over, randomized trial to assess the physiological effects of helmet pressure support ventilation (PSV) and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) as compared to high-flow nasal cannula during the early phase of acute hypoxemic respiratory failure
Transnasal humidified rapid insufflation ventilator exchange (THRIVE) or not during the anesthesia induction
The outlook for patients with haematological malignancies remains challenging. It has been shown in some early cancer studies that a particular drug called Zn-DDC otherwise known as Imuthiol is highly toxic to cancer stem cells. Imuthiol has been intravenously used in clinical trials with an excellent safety record. Recent novel therapy and immunotherapy in haematological malignancies have improved outcome and survival but come with an increasing cost burden. Imuthiol could be an ideal affordable drug to study on it's own as well as in combination with other drugs in myeloma and other haematological malignancies. This may lead to potential combination therapies which will be very effective as well as affordable in the future. There is the need to look to see if this drug, Imuthiol and along with complementary drugs lenalidomide (Revlimid) and pomalidomide (Pomalyst) can help in haematological malignancy treatment. In order to do this there is the need to see how the cancer cells respond to the drugs in the laboratory before being able to trial the drug (or combination of drugs) out for treatment. The success of this study may lead to quick translation of Imuthiol into haematological malignancy treatment.
During exercise in conditions of low oxygen (termed hypoxia), such as mountaineering at high altitudes, the lung blood vessels constrict in an attempt to protect the body from the negative effects of hypoxia. It appears that this blood vessel constriction may limit the heart to pump blood during heavy exercise, leading to reductions in exercise performance. Inhaled nitric oxide is a drug that is known to relax the lung blood vessels. Inhaled nitric oxide has been used to relax lung blood vessels and improve exercise capacity in patients with chronic disease. It is unknown if similar improvements would be observed during exercise in healthy individuals when exposed to low levels of oxygen. The goal of this study is to determine if inhaled nitric oxide can relax the lung blood vessels and improve the heart's pumping ability during exercise in low oxygen conditions. Further, the investigators will determine if these improvements in lung blood vessel and heart function increase exercise performance. Participants will complete 6 sessions over a three week period where they will perform exercise challenges while breathing low levels of oxygen with and without inhaled nitric oxide. The low oxygen conditions will be comparable to being at an altitude of 14,000-17,000 feet. 17,000 feet would be equivalent to standing on the summit of King Peak in the Yukon (the 4th tallest mountain in Canada).
Neonatal anoxia-ischemia causes significant neurodevelopmental disorders. In this study the investigators want to better understand the interactions between the nervous and the hemodynamic cerebral systems during the adaptation of the neonate to ectopic life just after birth. Birth is an at risk situation of neonatal anoxic ischemia and the lack of objective criteria for cerebral tissue oxygenation has consequences on neuronal activity. Ph cord analysis is inadequate and only indirectly reflects the state of cerebral oxygenation. Both neuronal and vascular systems are part of the same functional entity and the analysis of their interactions is likely to reveal some early malfunctions of these networks. In this study, the investigators want to develop a multi-scale, multimodal approach that allows simultaneous interrogation of both neuronal and vascular compartments during the 15 minutes after delivery. The investigators will record, with the aid of a single sensor placed on the scalp of the child, the electroencephalogram and the cerebral tissue oxygenation. The investigators will measure interactions by means of correlation analysis between both signals.
A multicenter, randomized, adaptive allocation clinical trial to determine if increasing durations of induced hypothermia are associated with an increasing rate of good neurological outcomes and to identify the optimal duration of induced hypothermia for neuroprotection in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest.
Treatment of O2 naïve patients with PAH will be included in this investigator-initiated trial (IIT) to assess efficacy and safety of oxygen substitution. Nocturnal oxygen substitution improved the 6MWD compared to placebo in one clinical trial in PAH patients. Due to the positive results in the treatment of patients with PAH, the initiation of this proof-of-concept study is justified.