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Lower Resp Tract Infection clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Lower Resp Tract Infection.

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NCT ID: NCT04602234 Completed - Clinical trials for Ultrasound Therapy; Complications

Diagnostic of Lower Respiratory Tract Infection by Lung Ultrasonography in General Practice

AmbuLUS
Start date: December 30, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Lower Respiratory Tract Infection (LRTI) is a frequent motive of consultation in General Practice. Cost, irradiation and availability of traditional imagery make it difficult to perform in every patient with suspected LRTI. The objective is to evaluate the performance of LUS realized by family physicians into the usual LRTI diagnostic pathway. This study is a prospective, interventional, multi-centric and open study conducted in 3 different centers by 15 General Practitioners (GP) in France. Patient complaining of dyspnea or cough were recruited from December 2019 to March 2020. GP received a training course by LUS expert before the study. The primary outcome measure was diagnosis modification after LUS. Secondary measures were therapeutic modification after LUS, decision of imagery prescription after LUS, decision of hospitalization or not after LUS, medical evolution and result of imagery initially prescribed by GP.

NCT ID: NCT04320862 Completed - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

COVID-19 Pandemic Response Network

Start date: April 3, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19) represents an unprecedented challenge to the operations and population health management efforts of health care systems around the world. The "Pandemic Research Network (PRN): Duke Community Health Watch" study leverages technology, clinical research, epidemiology, telemedicine, and population health management capabilities to understand how to safely COVID-19. The target population is individuals in the Duke Health region as well as individuals beyond the Duke Health region who have flu-like symptoms, a viral test order for COVID-19, confirmed COVID-19, or concern for exposure to COVID-19. A subgroup of particular interest within the target population is health care workers (HCW) and families of HCW. Community members will enroll in the study electronically and for 28 days will be reminded via email or SMS to submit signs and symptoms related to COVID-19. Participants who report symptoms will be provided information about COVID-19 testing (if needed) and established mechanisms to seek care within Duke Health. Instructions for telemedicine and in-person visits, which is available publicly at https://www.dukehealth.org/covid-19-update, will be presented to participants. Participants who are unable to report symptoms independently may be contacted via telephone by Population Health Management Office (PHMO) or Clinical Events Classification (CEC) team members. Data collected through the "Pandemic Response Network (PRN): Duke Community Health Watch" study will be used for three objectives. - First, to characterize the epidemiological features of COVID-19. Specifically, we will have a high-risk subgroup of HCW and families of HCW that we enroll. - Second, to develop models that predict deterioration and the need for inpatient care, intensive care, and mechanical ventilation. - Third, to develop forecast models to estimate the volume of inpatient and outpatient resources needed to manage a COVID-19 population. The primary risk to study participants is loss of protected health information. To address this concern, all data will be stored in Duke's REDCap instance and the Duke Protected Analytics Compute Environment (PACE).

NCT ID: NCT04239521 Completed - Asthma Clinical Trials

The Epidemiology, Management, and the Associated Burden of Related Conditions in Alopecia Areata

Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study series consists of four related studies and aims to explore and describe many important elements of alopecia areata over three key areas: (1) the current epidemiology of alopecia areata, (2) the prevalence and incidence of psychiatric co-morbidities in people with alopecia areata, (3) the prevalence and incidence of autoimmune and atopic conditions in people with alopecia areata, and (4) the incidence of common infections in people with alopecia areata.

NCT ID: NCT03379779 Completed - Respiratory Failure Clinical Trials

Evaluation the Association of Microbiome Between Respiratory Tract Samples and Stool Samples in Pneumonic Patients Accompanied by Respiratory Failure

Start date: August 28, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

A prospective observational study. Enrolled participants admitted to ICU due to pneumonia and respiratory failure need mechanical ventilator support. Investigators collected the residual specimens, such as sputum from endotrachea aspiration, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid in those participants as the usual care in the ICU. Those residual samples were sent to extract RNA and sequence by using high-throughput sequencing (next-generation sequencing) method. Investigators will compared the microbiome feature between lower respiratory tract and stool specimens in those participants diagnosed as pneumonia with respiratory failure.

NCT ID: NCT03361670 Completed - Clinical trials for Lower Resp Tract Infection

Prospective Clinical Evaluation of the FilmArray® Lower Respiratory Tract Infection (LRTI) Panel

LRTI
Start date: October 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This is a performance study to test the sensitivity and specificity of the BioFire FilmArray Lower Respiratory Tract Infection (LRTI) Panel. The purpose of this study is to prospectively collect and test residual Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and sputum specimens and generate performance data to support regulatory classification of the FilmArray LRTI as an in vitro diagnostic (IVD) in the US, European Union (EU), Canada, and other regions.

NCT ID: NCT03191071 Completed - Clinical trials for Lower Resp Tract Infection

An Algorithm to Decide on Antibiotic Prescription in Lower Respiratory Tract Infection in Primary Care

UltraPro
Start date: September 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study is randomized clustered pragmatic trial whose objective is to decrease unnecessary antibiotic prescription in adult patients with lower respiratory tract infection managed at primary care level in Switzerland, using a simple algorithm based on 2 point of care test results

NCT ID: NCT02979626 Completed - Influenza Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Moderate to Severe Influenza Outcomes in Children

M2SFlu
Start date: January 30, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study was to determine whether moderate-severe endpoints (including high fever, lower respiratory tract disease, acute otitis media, or serious extra-pulmonary complications) were predictive of hospitalization, intensive care admission, antibiotic use and other complications in children under 8 years of age.