Clinical Trials Logo

Sleep Apnea clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Sleep Apnea.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT02701504 Completed - Sleep Apnea Clinical Trials

Undiagnosed Sleep Apnea and Bypass OperaTion

SABOT
Start date: October 1, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sleep apnea is a prevalent disorder in patients with coronary artery disease. Previous studies suggested sleep apnea was associated with coronary plaque burden and future adverse cardiovascular events after percutaneous coronary intervention. In the SABOT study, the investigators used a FDA-approved portable sleep device to diagnose sleep apnea, and evaluate the relationship between sleep apnea and cardiovascular outcomes after non-urgent coronary artery bypass surgery.

NCT ID: NCT02685579 Withdrawn - Sleep Apnea Clinical Trials

The Effect of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Treatment on Dizziness, Vertigo

OSATDV
Start date: June 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Obstructive Sleep Apnea may cause dizziness or vertigo through hypoxia of the vestibular nuclei in the brain. Treating sleep apnea may improve dizziness or vertigo.

NCT ID: NCT02670096 Withdrawn - Sleep Apnea Clinical Trials

A Single-center Pilot Study Evaluating the Immediate Effects of Low-dose Acetazolamide on Respiratory Control in Subjects With Treatment Emergent Sleep Disordered Breathing

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

This is a single center pilot study evaluating the immediate effects of low-dose acetazolamide on respiratory control in subjects with treatment emergent sleep disordered breathing. The purpose of this study is to assess the immediate effect one-time low-dose acetazolamide on sleep breathing in (Treatment Emergent Sleep Disordered Breathing) TE-CSA subjects compared to subjects' baseline evaluation without acetazolamide. Investigators will also try to determine the immediate effect of one-time low-dose acetazolamide on subjects' resting ventilation and ventilatory response slope compared to subjects' baseline evaluation without acetazolamide.

NCT ID: NCT02651649 Not yet recruiting - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Pregnancy, Sleep Disordered Breathing and Peripartum Complications

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

Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) during pregnancy is a modifiable risk factor for poor maternal and fetal outcomes. The investigators propose a prospective observational study to assess the utility of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) administration (intervention) during pregnancy to reduce maternal and fetal morbidity. Secondarily, we will also perform a cohort study to assess the incidence of antenatal sleep-disordered breathing as measured by ambulatory sleep monitoring applied in the hospital setting.

NCT ID: NCT02635100 Terminated - Sleep Apnea Clinical Trials

Multinight CPAP for Sleep Apnea Patients

Start date: May 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a prevalent disorders characterized by intermittent obstructions of the upper airway during sleep. Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) has been shown to be the most efficacious treatment for OSA. It consists of a small device that provides positive airway pressure delivered by a mask attached to the patients nose/mouth.

NCT ID: NCT02630121 Recruiting - Sleep Apnea Clinical Trials

Effect of Oxymetazoline Hydrochloride in Combination With Fluticasone Propionate on the Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) in Subject With Persistent Nasal Congestion and Mild Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Start date: April 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The addition of intranasal oxymetazoline for two weeks to already instituted optimal doses of intranasal fluticasone propionate will decrease the total number of obstructive apneas and hypopneas per hour of sleep in subjects with perennial allergic or non-allergic rhinitis and mild obstructive sleep apnea who have persistent nasal congestion despite maximum doses of NGCS.

NCT ID: NCT02620930 Active, not recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Diagnosis And Treatment of Sleep Apnea in Patient With Heart Failure

DASAP-HF
Start date: March 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

DASAP-HF is an observational prospective single arm study. All patients will be treated according to the standard care followed by each center. The protocol requires enrollment of consecutive patients from each center, according to eligibility criteria. All patients must sign the Patient Informed Consent (PIC) before the enrollment in the study. All patients, after the enrollment phase, will be followed for 24 months. Approximately every 12 months a clinical follow-up procedure should be performed in each patient. A sleep study will be done in all patients at 1 month (or at 3 months) from the enrollment, in order to evaluate the performance of the algorithm as a diagnostic tool in this population (primary objective). During the 24 months follow-up period, all Adverse Events occurred in the study population will be collected (HF hospitalizations, all-cause deaths, ventricular arrhythmias, etc.). At the end of the 24 months follow-up, the incidence of clinical events will be evaluated as well as its association with the Respiratory Disturbance Index (RDI) values calculated by APNEA Scan algorithm (secondary objective).

NCT ID: NCT02596087 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Improving Quality by Maintaining Accurate Problems in the EHR

IQ-MAPLE
Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall goal of the IQ-MAPLE project is to improve the quality of care provided to patients with several heart, lung and blood conditions by facilitating more accurate and complete problem list documentation. In the first aim, the investigators will design and validate a series of problem inference algorithms, using rule-based techniques on structured data in the electronic health record (EHR) and natural language processing on unstructured data. Both of these techniques will yield candidate problems that the patient is likely to have, and the results will be integrated. In Aim 2, the investigators will design clinical decision support interventions in the EHRs of the four study sites to alert physicians when a candidate problem is detected that is missing from the patient's problem list - the clinician will then be able to accept the alert and add the problem, override the alert, or ignore it entirely. In Aim 3, the investigators will conduct a randomized trial and evaluate the effect of the problem list alert on three endpoints: alert acceptance, problem list addition rate and clinical quality.

NCT ID: NCT02577445 Terminated - Sleep Apnea Clinical Trials

The remedÄ“® System for the Treatment of Central Sleep Apnea in Daily Practice

TREAT-CSA
Start date: February 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The aim of this post market study is to assess the impact of sleep-disordered breathing on the well-being of patients according to the treatment chosen, i.e. with or without implantation of the remedÄ“® system to treat sleep-disordered breathing.

NCT ID: NCT02576587 Completed - Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trials

Influence of Sleep Apnea on Risk of Atrial Fibrillation

Safebeat
Start date: January 1, 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Elucidation of the Influence of Sleep Apnea on Risk of Atrial Fibrillation study. The study involves a case control design to investigate the extent to which there is an independent relationship of sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF). Cases will be defined as clinically identified patients with PAF and controls as those without AF. In order to rigorously address important biologic confounding influences, the cases and controls will be individually matched based upon age, gender, race, and body mass index. Those participants with both PAF and SDB (Apnea Hypopnea Index, AHI>=15) will be asked to return for a follow up exam after 3 months of SDB treatment in the Clinical Research Unit (CRU) for collection of the same measures collected at the baseline exam to observe for any significant changes with the purpose of collecting effect size data to inform future clinical trials. The total duration of the study is 4 years. The duration for any individual participant is up to from one to 13 weeks months, including a 3-month treatment period for those with moderate to severe SDB, i.e. AHI>15.