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Rheumatic Diseases clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Rheumatic Diseases.

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NCT ID: NCT03770884 Completed - Clinical trials for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Rheumatism and Dietetic: RHUMADIET Study (Food Practices and Beliefs)

RHUMADIET
Start date: January 8, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cross sectional study assessing food practices and beliefs in RA, AS and DA (digital arthritis)

NCT ID: NCT03762824 Completed - Clinical trials for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Combined Pneumococcal Conjugate and Polysaccharide Vaccination in Inflammatory Rheumatic Disease

IPS-BOOSTER
Start date: June 14, 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The overall objective of this project is to study the influence of modern anti-inflammatory treatments in established inflammatory rheumatic diseases (IRD) on antibody response elicited by pneumococcal vaccination using 13-valent conjugate vaccine in combined schedules with 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine. In addition, the aim is to study the clinical aspects of vaccination regarding: tolerability in immunosuppressed patients with IRD, impact on existing rheumatic disease, possible association with onset of new autoimmune diseases, long-term immunity following pneumococcal vaccination and efficacy in preventing invasive pneumococcal disease. Results from this study are expected to bridge the existing knowledge gap and contribute to body of evidence needed for recommendations and implementation of vaccination program in IRD patients.

NCT ID: NCT03753893 Completed - Macular Edema Clinical Trials

Ocular Manifestations in Rheumatic Diseases

Start date: May 1, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a search strategy for determining the prevalence of ocular complications in inflammatory rheumatic diseases for the purposes of a meta analysis.

NCT ID: NCT03751644 Completed - Rheumatic Diseases Clinical Trials

Peripherical Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation in Systemic Autoimmune Myopathies

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

Systemic autoimmune myopathies are a heterogeneous group of rheumatic diseases with progressive skeletal muscle weakness. The relevance of the peripherical neuromuscular electrical stimulation has never applied in the patients with systemic autoimmune myopathies. Therefore, the main objective of the present prospective, randomized, investigator-blind, placebo-controlled study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the application of an acute peripherical neuromuscular electrical stimulation session in patients with systemic autoimmune myopathies.

NCT ID: NCT03736278 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Characteristics of Tuberculosis Infection in Rheumatic Disease

Start date: November 10, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A retrospective study evaluating the characteristics of tuberculosis infection in patients of rheumatic disease.

NCT ID: NCT03589300 Completed - Clinical trials for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Persona TM Tibia Clinical Outcomes Study

Start date: April 30, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate clinical performance for the commercially available Persona TM Tibia used in primary cementless tibia total knee arthroplasty.

NCT ID: NCT03558971 Completed - Rheumatic Diseases Clinical Trials

Patient Self-administration of Cortisol for Cortisol-responding Disorders in Men and Women Over the Age of 17

Start date: January 1, 2000
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Participants diagnosed as having fibromyalgia, osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis are to be brought to a minimum symptom state using a 3-week period during which they are to ingest modest doses of cortisol tablets with weekly lowered tapered doses. Thereafter, the participants are to be taught to self-administer cortisol tablets on the as-needed basis to maintain the minimum symptom state. For this, they are to ingest a smaller-dosage, 5-day tapered regimen of cortisol tablets to quench each reoccurring exacerbation of the disease at its earliest stage. Participants are limited to using less than the safe use limit of cortisol per month and are required to include a minimum of 10 days per month during which no cortisol was ingested.

NCT ID: NCT03492658 Completed - Clinical trials for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Abatacept to Silence Anti-citrullinated Protein Antibody-expressing B Cells in Rheumatoid Arthritis (ASCARA)

Start date: May 17, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To investigate the effect of CTLA4-Ig (abatacept) on phenotype, transcriptional profile, B cell receptor usage and functional parameters of circulating B cells expressing anticitrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA) in patients with early, methotrexate-naïve, ACPA positive rheumatoid arthritis.

NCT ID: NCT03454438 Completed - Arthralgia Clinical Trials

Strategies to Improve Appropriate Referral to Rheumatologists

Start date: February 28, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this cluster randomized controlled trial is to improve the number of effectively referred patients with IRD to the rheumatology outpatient clinic with either use of validated referral pro formas or triage of IRD by specialists in a primary care setting compared to usual care. In addition, the investigators want to provide tools for the general practitioner to recognise IRD and improve early referral of patients with IRD, and a cost-effectiveness analysis will be performed to evaluate the decreasing effect on health-care cost.

NCT ID: NCT03445403 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Pain Syndrome

Offset Analgesia as a Measure of Central Sensitization in Children

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

Pediatric chronic pain disorders are common and consequential in Western societies, occurring in 25-80% of population-based samples with a median prevalence of 11-38% and significant pain-related disability in 3-5% of these children. Pediatric chronic pain disorders have a negative impact on many aspects children's lives including mobility, night sleep, school attendance, peer relationships, family functioning, and overall quality of life. Parents caring for these children risk loss of parental earnings, and these disorders place a high financial burden on healthcare. In a nationally representative sample in the United States, costs related to health care were significantly higher ($1,339 per capita) for children with chronic pain disorders compared to children with common pediatric health conditions of ADHD, asthma and obesity. In children with clinical chronic pain conditions, such as daily headaches or fibromyalgia, chronic pain is presumably a persistent state of an overly excitable nervous system. This phenomenon known as central sensitization is characterized by excessive pain sensitivity that occurs in response to non-painful stimuli, such as light touch or contact with clothing, and slightly painful stimuli, such as a light pinprick. This hypersensitivity results from peculiar changes in the working of the central nervous system, including the spinal cord and brain, and leads to unusual intensification of pain that is out of proportion to the inciting stimulus. For example, light touch from clothing on the skin is perceived as intensely painful. Central sensitization is also thought to contribute to the spreading of pain to other body sites in several chronic pain disorders. In chronic pain disorders, the function of the central descending inhibitory modulating system is likely impaired and is traditionally measured by a phenomenon identified as "conditioned pain modulation (CPM)" and more recently measured by a phenomenon of "offset analgesia" (OA). The OA test is more robust than the CPM test and likely more acceptable to most patients, especially children, because it is shorter in duration and uses a more tolerable painful stimulus. Compared to CPM, the OA test is more tolerable because it is conducted using a painful test stimulus that is less than the maximal (suprathreshold). Additionally, the time of exposure to the painful stimulus is significantly shorter, a few seconds, in the OA test compared to CPM. The central descending inhibitory pathway that modulates pain as tested by OA is functional and mature in healthy children as young as 6 year of age, but it has yet to be investigated in children with chronic pain disorders. The investigators plan to test OA responses in a population of common pediatric pain disorders with overlapping symptomology attributed to central sensitization (such as chronic musculoskeletal pain, chronic abdominal pain and chronic headaches and chronic regional pain syndromes) and compare their responses with an age- and sex-matched control group. The characteristics of OA responses in each group will allow for assessment of the presence or absence of central sensitization as a mechanism driving the persistent, abnormal pain in a subgroup of these chronic pain disorders. The investigators hypothesize that central sensitization is the potential contributory mechanism of the central nervous system heightened sensitivity to two testing stimuli of painful (moderate heat discomfort sensation) and non-painful (warmth sensation) in children with chronic pain disorders. These types of sensations mimic those that children would be expected to experience their natural environment during typical activities of daily living such as showering/bathing in warm water or hand washing. Additionally, the Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire (PSQ) and Central Sensitization Inventory (CSI) will be used as clinical screening tools for subjective report of sensitization symptoms, and are simple and easy to administer in a clinical setting. The investigators hypothesize that these measures will correlate with the objective offset analgesia responses thus allowing for assessment of central sensitization in children with chronic pain disorders. These tests are advantageous because they are feasible to perform rapidly in a clinic setting and have utility for measurement of patient responses to therapeutic interventions. If this concept is supported by this study, future studies could utilize OA to examine the effects of various pharmacological and physical interventions used to manage children with chronic pain disorders including intensive interdisciplinary rehabilitation or specific interventions such as aerobic exercise, which likely modulates pain via similar mechanisms.