View clinical trials related to Sleep Apnea.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to clarify the influence of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome on left ventricular function using echocardiographic parameters including the myocardial performance index (Tei-index), and to determine the short-term effects of nCPAP on them.
The purpose of this study is to compare the levels of 8-isoprostane and other oxidative stress biomarkers in plasma and condensed exhaled air between patients with SAHS and cardiovascular complications, patients with SAHS without cardiovascular complications and control subjects. To evaluate the effect of three months of treatment with CPAP on the oxidative stress biomarkers.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether treating sleep apnea with continuous positive airway pressure would result in improvements in cognition in patients with Alzheimer's disease.
A small number of uncontrolled studies have shown a high prevalence of sleep apnea in patients with refractory hypertension and that CPAP treatment achieves a significant reduction of blood pressure in the short term. The purpose of this study is to assess the prevalence of sleep apnea in patients with refractory hypertension, and the effects of continuous positive pressure treatment on systemic blood pressure and on serum markers of endothelial dysfunction and angiogenesis.
Newer home sleep study device and algorithm provides an alternative for inpatient sleep study and improve the service provides to patients
When a disorder is as prevalent as sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome various medical levels and strategies should be implicated. We to evaluate the degree of concordance in management between a sleep reference centre and non-reference centres.
New stroke therapies are needed. This study seeks to provide the preliminary data needed to plan a future study that will evaluate the efficacy of using continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) to treat stroke patients who have sleep apnea. Our goal is to use this therapy to reduce stroke symptom severity.
The purpose of this research study is to determine the effect of chronic nighttime low oxygen saturations on selected body systems (liver) that break down drugs in children with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS).
This randomized, controlled trial is designed to test whether treatment of sleep disordered breathing (SDB) with positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy alters the natural history of atrial fibrillation (AF). Patients with recent AF who are now in sinus rhythm, and found to have SDB (obstructive and/or central sleep apnea) by formal sleep study but without complaints of daytime sleepiness, are randomized to PAP therapy to eradicate SDB or to usual care (medical management as prescribed by the patient's cardiologist).
Generalist physicians in the outpatient setting care for 80% of the 300,000 patients who have transient ischemic attacks (TIA) annually in the United States. Despite existing secondary prevention therapies, recurrent ischemic events are common following a TIA. Given the risk of poor outcomes and the important role of the generalist, new therapeutic approaches for patients with TIA are needed that can be applied by generalists to outpatients. This research will develop and evaluate a new therapeutic approach that centers on the observations that sleep-disordered breathing is a risk factor for cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease, is common in patients with cerebrovascular disease, and is associated with poor outcome following a stroke or TIA. We posit that diagnosing and treating sleep-disordered breathing in the home of TIA patients can improve cerebrovascular and cardiovascular outcomes. The primary aims are to determine in TIA patients: 1) the prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing, 2) the feasibility of diagnosing and treating sleep-disordered breathing using an auto-titrating continuous positive airways pressure (auto-CPAP) machine within 24-hours of TIA symptom onset, 3) adherence to auto-CPAP, and 4) the effect of auto-CPAP on blood pressure. We will recruit 80 TIA patients to be randomly assigned to either the intervention or the control groups. Each patient in the intervention group will use an auto-CPAP machine for up to 90 days and will then receive an unattended sleep study using a sleep monitor. Each patient in the control group will receive two unattended sleep studies, one upon enrollment and another after 90 days.