View clinical trials related to Infections.
Filter by:With the advent of direct acting antiviral (DAA) treatment in 2013, HCV elimination has become feasible. Still, achieving HCV elimination in resource-limited countries appears to be arduous as several challenges need to be addressed. In remote settings, absence of HCV VL testing to identify those who require DAA and to monitor DAA success is a first issue. As of today, HCV VL testing is still restricted to central facilities in major cities. Blood sampling using DBS is an appealing option to allow HCV VL monitoring in remote settings as this option is inexpensive, does not require a cold chain for storage and transportation of the samples and can be implemented rapidly. A second issue is DAA access that remains scarce due to logistical and financial limitations. However, more affordable generic DAA, some of them being WHO pre-qualified, are now available. Vietnam is amongst the 20 countries with the highest HCV burden with an estimate of 1.5 million chronic HCV-infected people (HCV prevalence: 1.1%). As observed in many other settings, HCV prevalence is higher among vulnerable populations such as HIV-infected individuals and people who inject drugs (PWID). Vietnam has the will to increase access to DAA in the whole country. However, in remote settings, only some clinical sites will be allowed to dispense DAA. Discussions with the MoH of Vietnam brought to our knowledge that not all clinical sites caring for HIV patients and providing ART will dispense DAA. Thus, some HIV-HCV co-infected patients will be followed in clinical sites where they will receive both antiretroviral therapy and DAA, while some other patients will continue to be followed for HIV in their usual clinical site but will be asked to visit another clinical site for HCV care and to receive DAA. We anticipate that the proportion of patients who will comply with the 12-week DAA will be lower in patients followed for HIV and HCV in two clinical sites than in those followed in a single clinical site.
this is a double-blind randomized placebo controlled clinical trial. 200 healthy children aged 12-48 months, attending day care or preschool for at least 5 days a week, regularly checked by the family pediatrician (FP) involved in the trial, were considered for the study and consecutively contacted during scheduled medical examinations at the FPs office. study plan is 3-month treatment period. The clinical evaluation will be carried out at enrollment, at 30, 60 and 90 days from the beginning of the treatment by the pediatrician. fecal and nasal mucus samples for immunological and microbiological analysis will be collected before the treatment and at 90 days (end of treatment).
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of Lactobacillus plantarum, Bacillus coagulans and Lactobacillus plantarum + Bacillus coagulans for eradication of Helicobacter Pylori, as well as the efficacy of Lactobacillus plantarum and Bacillus coagulans on side-effect caused by Helicobacter Pylori.
This research programme seeks to combine the resources of NHS primary care, with the leading spectroscopic work in low-magnetic fields of the Wilson Group (Nottingham Trent University) to demonstrate the potential for benchtop Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in human clinical pathology. This is an instrument assessment study for point of care viability which will also result in enhanced patient care (pending their consent) in blood screenings and metabolic health data.
Adverse drug events (ADE) are common and dangerous in the hospital and following discharge to the ambulatory setting. One cause of ADEs in both settings is medication regimen inappropriateness, including polypharmacy, drug-drug interactions, and medications that are inappropriate or inappropriately dosed given patients' age, renal, and hepatic function. Hospitalization provides a good opportunity to investigate medication appropriateness given new or worsening conditions and available expertise. Inpatient pharmacists are medication experts and often round with medical teams, but they may not always have all the information available at their fingertips to make optimal recommendations regarding medication appropriateness for each patient. Clinical decision support to pharmacists at the point of care has potential to improve the speed, quantity, and quality of medication recommendations to inpatient teams; any subsequent improvements to medication regimen appropriateness have the potential to reduce ADEs in the hospital and after discharge. Specific Aims and Objectives Aim 1: Implement real-time decision support regarding medication regimen appropriateness among pharmacists who round with inpatient medical teams. Aim 2: Determine the effects of this intervention on the number of medication regimen recommendations and time spent per recommendation Aim 3: Evaluate the use and usability of the decision support tool and develop strategies to mitigate barriers and promote facilitators of implementation using mixed methods implementation science approaches.
- Detection of primary antimicrobial susceptibility and resistance of Helicobacter Pylori infection. - Detection of resistance and virulence genes of Helicobacter Pylori infection. - Assessment of H pylori carcinogenicity gene. - Evaluation of outcome and efficacy of antibiotics regimen will be used in our research. - Evaluation of effect of other factors as diet (fatty and spicy meal), drugs as NSAIDs use, antibiotics for any cause on response of H pylori to antibiotics regimen.
The researchers collected untreated H. pylori positive patients from outpatient clinics. Subjects were randomized to 14 days of dual therapy with Tegoprazan or 14 days of quadruple therapy with bismuth for eradication. At 6 weeks after treatment, subjects underwent another 13C-urea breath test. The eradication rate, adverse reaction rate and patient compliance were calculated.
The current practice of pre-VCUG antibiotic prophylaxis is highly variable. A recent unpublished survey of Society of Fetal Urologists (SFU) completed by this study team found that 87% of respondents reported having patients who develop fUTI following VCUG, with 30% of respondents prophylaxing for fUTI in patients undergoing VCUG. The current lack of best practice guidelines regarding antibiotic prophylaxis prior to VCUG due to low quality of current literature, and a growing concern around risks of unnecessary antibiotic exposure suggests the need for an RCT. The results of this pilot trial will inform the ability to conduct a definitive RCT on this important subject. The results of the definitive trial would have important clinical and economic implications.
In this study, we will try to answer the following questions: 1. What are the salient features of the microbiota in chronic anal fissure? 2. Are these features associated with prognosis and response to therapy? 3. Does an anal fissure swab and anal fissure tissue give comparable bacteriological results?
Recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI) in the patients chronically catheterized are serious challenges clinically. The pathogens are often multidrug-resistant bacteria and such UTIs are actually biofilm infections. Currently standard antibiotic treatment against UTI in Denmark is sensitive antibiotic monotherapy. Theoretically antibiotic monotherapy is not a good treatment against biofilm infections. In the patients with impaired renal functions, both i.v. and p.o. antibiotic treatments function poor. Therefore, bladder lavage might help. In the study, the participants will be randomly divided into three groups (monotherapy, combination and bladder lavage). The investigators will evaluate the results and find a better treatment based on the clinical evidences, which might benefit the patients.