View clinical trials related to Obstructive Sleep Apnea.
Filter by:Heart disease is a major cause of ill-health and death in adults. The risk factors for heart disease, if present in children, carry over into adult life. Childhood obesity has reached epidemic proportions in Canada and is associated with many heart disease risk factors such as high blood pressure. Another complication of obesity is obstructive sleep apnea. Sleep apnea is marked by snoring at night, pauses in breathing and low oxygen levels and occurs in up to 60% of obese children, but it is diagnosed in less than 20% of obese children. Importantly, sleep apnea in children, like obesity, is linked with high blood pressure and heart disease. Thus, children with sleep apnea who are obese are likely to have an increased risk for high blood pressure and heart disease. Currently, there is little knowledge of the extent of heart disease in obese children with sleep apnea. The best treatment for both obesity and sleep apnea is weight loss. Weight loss strategies are generally not very successful and since 75% of obese children will become obese adults, urgent treatments are needed to reduce heart disease in the long-term. Treating sleep apnea in obese children may be one of the ways to reduce heart disease. Sleep apnea can be treated with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), which involves wearing a mask attached to a breathing machine while asleep. It is unknown how effective CPAP is in reducing heart disease in obese children. The investigators will recruit children with sleep apnea who are obese and test for heart disease risk. The investigators will then treat these children with CPAP. After 6 months of CPAP, the investigators will repeat the tests to determine if CPAP lowers the risk for heart disease. At the end of the 6 months, those receiving CPAP will be randomized to either continue CPAP or discontinue CPAP for a 2 week period. At the end of the 2 week period the participants will repeat the tests again to determine the magnitude of the effect of CPAP. The investigators expect that CPAP treatment for sleep apnea in obese children will reduce blood pressure and lower heart disease. These results will increase awareness of the dangers of sleep apnea in obese children, which will facilitate early diagnosis and treatment, ultimately reducing heart disease long-term.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has detrimental effects on the health and quality of life of suffers. Recent literature has shown that females may be particularly susceptible to adverse the quality of life effects, and that female obstructive sleep apnea manifests differently than male obstructive sleep apnea. A new AutoSetting Positive Airway Pressure (PAP) device has been designed specifically to treat female OSA. In this Cohort study, female patients who are newly diagnosed with OSA will be asked to complete various questionnaires relating to their quality of life. Patients will then use the AutoSet for Her for three months. At the completion of the three months the questionnaires will be repeated. Before treatment and after treatment quality of life will be compared to determine if treating female specific OSA in these patients improves quality of life.
This will be a prospective study in subjects with Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) to characterize the clinical performance during a single night of therapy with a FRESCA mask compared with a single night of therapy with their existing nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) mask.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of TranQuillTM Sling (a suture or thread used in surgery that is knotless) in snoreplasty (surgery procedure) for the treatment of snoring and mild OSA in adult subjects. The TranQuill Sling Snoreplasty (QSS) is a procedure where the suture will be inserted into the soft palate tissues for the treatment of snoring and/or mild obstructive sleep apnea. Soft palate tissues are tissues in the back of the roof of the mouth. The research results will be used to provide data on feasibility (strengths and weaknesses), safety, performance, and effectiveness data for the Surgical Specialties, Inc as a therapy for snoring and/or mild obstructive sleep apnea. The TranQuillTM Sling is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The TranQuillTM Sling is used in all types of surgery that involved deep tissues in the body. The investigator in charge of the study is Dr. Boyd Gillespie. MUSC and Dr. Gillespie receive financial support from Surgical Specialties, Inc. to conduct the study. MUSC is the only place that this study will be conducted. For this research study the investigators plan to enroll a total of up to 20 subjects at the Medical University of South Carolina.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the subjective performance of the Menai mask systems (full face, nasal, and pillows variants), compared against Comparison mask systems.
Little is understood about how different auto-adjusting PAP devices operate. The purpose of this evaluation is to compare two devices in a randomised two night PSG trial.
To evaluate the efficacy (non-inferiority) in terms of response between patients using custom fitted mandibular advancement devices ONIRIS® and patient using laboratory custom made devices TALI, after 2 months of use. Sleeping tests were performed.
This is a Phase 3 study to assess the long-term safety and maintenance of efficacy of JZP-110 in subjects who have completed Study 14-002, 14-003, 14-004, 15-004, 15-005, ADX-N05 201, or ADX-N05 202.
This trial is a 6-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized-withdrawal, multicenter study of safety and efficacy of JZP-110 in the treatment of excessive sleepiness in adult subjects with OSA.
This trial is a 12 week, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled, multicenter, 5-arm parallel group study of safety and efficacy of JZP-110 in the treatment of excessive sleepiness in adult subjects with OSA.