Clinical Trials Logo

Lung Diseases clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Lung Diseases.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT02872090 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Effects of Long Acting Bronchodilators on CARDiac Autonomic Control in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

LAB-Card
Start date: March 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this interventional, randomized, double-blind, monocentric, cross-over study is to quantify the possible deleterious effect on the cardiac autonomic nervous system control of two long-acting anticholinergic bronchodilatators (tiotropium and glycopyrronium) and one beta-2 agonist long-acting bronchodilatator (indacaterol ) in patients with mild COPD.

NCT ID: NCT02867761 Completed - Clinical trials for COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)

RETHINC: REdefining THerapy In Early COPD for the Pulmonary Trials Cooperative

RETHINC
Start date: August 29, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The study hypothesis is that symptomatic current and former smokers with spirometric values within the normal range (post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC≥0.70 and post-BD FVC ≥ 70% predicted will still derive symptomatic benefit from long-acting bronchodilator therapy even though they are excluded from current GOLD guideline recommendations.

NCT ID: NCT02865525 Completed - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Development and Validation of a Self-administered QUestionnaire to Identify Levers of Adhesion Behavior to Patient's Medication in Order to Adapt the Educational Monitoring.

QUILAM
Start date: March 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Medication non-adherence is an economic problem and a major public health challenge. Factors influencing medication adherence can be modelled according to five dimensions: disease, medication, patient and its close relatives, demographic and socioeconomic factors and health care system. A tool is needed to qualify medication adherence in order to adapt tailored support for individual patients to promote and optimize adherence to therapy. The objective of this work is to present the preliminary results of QUILAM project which is divided into 3 phases: 1. Development of a tool to assess barriers to medication adherence in chronic patient (COPD, Heart failure, Type 2 diabetes) ; 2. Validation of the instrument (especially against clinical criteria) ; 3. Evaluation of the sensitivity of the tool during educational interventions.

NCT ID: NCT02864407 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive

Vahelva Respimat Regulatory Post-marketing Surveillance in Korean Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Start date: December 19, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To monitor the safety profile and effectiveness of Vahelva Respimat in Korean patients with COPD in a routine clinical practice setting

NCT ID: NCT02864342 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD

Adherence Study in COPD Patients

Start date: August 12, 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

A randomized clinical study to assess the impact of Symbicort® pMDI medication reminders on adherence in COPD patients

NCT ID: NCT02860728 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Resistance Training to Prehabilitate Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Start date: August 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Structural changes in skeletal muscles of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have been linked to impaired muscle function, reduced exercise capacity, and increased mortality associated with this disease. Muscle dysfunction also contributes to dyspnea intensity and the ability to sustain exercise, making aerobic exercise training intolerable at the intensity and/or volume required to achieve clinically important changes. Resistance training (RT) is an attractive exercise modality because it is efficacious and more tolerable initially. No work has examined whether a short-term RT program can reduce exertional symptoms and improve exercise tolerance (dyspnea and leg fatigue) in patients with COPD.

NCT ID: NCT02859194 Completed - Bronchiectasis Clinical Trials

The Effect of Lt to Rt Shunt Using Veno-veno-arterial Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) on Coronary Oxygenation in Lung Transplantation Patients

Start date: May 31, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

ECMO(Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) is being essential for cardiopulmonary failure patients. There are two types of ECMO, which is veno-veno (V-V) that can be used in respiratory failure patients and veno-arterial (V-A) that can be used in cardiac failure patients. V-A ECMO can also be used during lung transplantation, substitution of cardiopulmonary bypass, which can show sufficient performance during operation and better postoperative outcome. However, regarding V-A ECMO circulating from femoral vein to femoral artery, there is a pro blem of differential hypoxia which might influence coronary artery and head vessels. In this prospective study, the investigators are planning to put another ECMO catheter into internal jugular vein which takes a role of left to right shunt, to mitigate the hypoxia of coronary artery.

NCT ID: NCT02858791 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Hypertension

MIF- Thyroxine Interactions in the Pathogenesis of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Start date: February 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The investigators will investigate the interrelationship of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) and free T4 in patients with PAH.

NCT ID: NCT02858180 Completed - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Hepatitis C Virus(HCV) Heart and Lung Study

Start date: December 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a multicenter study in Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) infected adult patients who also have advanced cardiac disease or advanced lung disease.

NCT ID: NCT02857842 Completed - COPD Clinical Trials

Corticosteroid Reduction in COPD

Cortico-cop
Start date: August 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study explores whether patients hospitalized with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation may have fewer days with prednisolone and with the same treatment effect by controlling the treatment by daily measurements of eosinophils.