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Sleep Disordered Breathing clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Sleep Disordered Breathing.

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NCT ID: NCT04002739 Recruiting - Sleep Clinical Trials

PRedictOrs, PHEnotypes and Timing of Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Acute Coronary Syndrome

PROPHET-ACS
Start date: June 15, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a well-known disorder of upper airways collapse during sleep time leading to oxygen desaturation and sleep fragmentation. Despite being increasingly recognized as cardiovascular risk, the effect of OSA on clinical outcomes after Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) is not fully defined. Also, OSA syndrome is highly prevalent in ACS and may be related to the deterioration of cardiac function resulting in worsening of the severity of sleep apnea or the intermittent hypoxia could be cardio-protective via the ischemic preconditioning event. Serial sleep studies have shown the progressive reduction of the Apnea / Hypopnea Index (AHI) from the admission in Coronary Care Unit (CCU) to 6 weeks, 12 weeks and 6-month follow up, making necessary to re-assess the severity of OSA after discharge. Therefore, further research in this field is necessary to screen and predict those ACS patients who may experience a change in their AHI index over time.

NCT ID: NCT03718858 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

The Impact of Interscalene Block on Sleep Disordered Breathing

OSA-ISB
Start date: July 23, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized controlled trial evaluating the impact of interscalene block on worsening of upper airway collapse in sleep disordered breathing for patients undergoing ambulatory shoulder surgery.

NCT ID: NCT03437954 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Sleep Disordered Breathing

Outcomes of Post-operative Diet in Children Following Tonsillectomy and Adenoidectomy

Start date: December 15, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research is being done because it is not known which dietary recommendations are best to help patients recover after a tonsillectomy and/or adenoidectomy. The purpose of this study is to determine how diet after tonsil/adenoid surgery affects bleeding, pain, and oral intake.

NCT ID: NCT03299023 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

The Effect of Tooth Position During Orthodontic Treatment on the Apnea/ Hypopnea Index (AHI)

Start date: January 20, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The study design of this research project involves orthodontic patients registered at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine who are deemed eligible to undergo orthodontic treatment and who have been provided with sufficient information to make informed consent to join the sleep study. These patients will be provided with the Medibyte sleep monitor and instructed on the proper manner in which it should be set up and worn for the one night study period. This process will be carried out twice throughout the course of the study, once before any orthodontic appliance has been cemented and once after the required amount of tooth movement has been attained with the orthodontic appliance still in place. The de-identified data from the Medibyte monitor will be downloaded using the Braebon software and analyzed.

NCT ID: NCT03142022 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Lung Transplantation

Sleep-disordered Breathing After Solid Organ Transplantation

Start date: November 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) describes a group of disorders in which partial or complete cessation of breathing occurs many times throughout the night, resulting in daytime sleepiness or fatigue that interferes with a person's ability to function and reduces quality of life. Transplantation has become an important treatment modality for end-stage organ failure. Transplant recipients are now living longer and, hence, develop chronic adverse medical conditions. Furthermore, transplantation is associated with weight gain. Despite the high prevalence of poor sleep and cardiovascular conditions among transplant patients, SDB is not well studied in these patients.

NCT ID: NCT02632162 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Sleep Disordered Breathing

Prevalence, Severity and Natural Course of Sleep Apnea After Cardiac Surgery

SDB-ZRW
Start date: May 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is common in cardiovascular patients. Patients after cardiac surgery will be screened for SDB with the ApnoeLink device at the beginning of cardiac Rehabilitation and then after 3 weeks and 3 months.

NCT ID: NCT02204865 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Validation of the ApneaScan Algorithm in Sleep Disordered Breathing

ApneaScan
Start date: March 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Sleep disordered breathing, in which patients my breath deeply, shallowly or stop breathing for periods whilst asleep, is common in heart failure and associated with a poor prognosis. This study aims to validate a novel function available on certain pacemakers which is designed to detect this condition.The investigators hypothesize that ApneaScan can accurately detect moderate to severe sleep disordered breathing in patients with heart failure as compared against an Embletta sleep study. The investigators will also follow up our patients for 2 years to determine whether the severity of sleep disordered breathing as assessed by ApneaScan correlates with prognosis.

NCT ID: NCT02043353 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

The Natural History and Outcome of Sleep Disordered Breathing in Children

Start date: August 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Sleep-disordered breathing in children is characterized by recurrent events of partial or complete upper airway obstruction during sleep, resulting in disruption of normal gas exchange (intermittent hypoxia and hypercapnia) and sleep fragmentation. The major symptom is snoring or noisy breathing. Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB) is a wide spectrum of disorders that includes primary snoring, UARS and OSA. The main etiology for SDB in children is enlarged tonsils and adenoids and therefore the first line of treatment in pediatric SDB is adenotonsillectomy. The objectives of this study are: 1. To investigate the natural history of primary snoring 2. To investigate the effect of seasonality on SDB severity 3. To compare the effect of adenoidectomy to adenotonsillectomy in the treatment of SDB in children 4. To characterize the children referred for repeated PSG following adenoidectomy or adenotonsillectomy and the indications for second PSG evaluation.

NCT ID: NCT01979120 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Heart Failure

Validation of the "ApneaScan" Algorithm for the Detection of Sleep Disordered Breathing in Chronic Heart Failure

VASA
Start date: December 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

A prospective observational multi-centre study for the validation of the ApneaScan algorithm (integrated in ICD devices (with or without cardiac resynchronization therapy function) of the "Incepta" series for the screening of sleep disordered breathing in patients with stable symptomatic chronic heart failure, using portable polygraphy monitoring device ("Embletta Gold") as reference for the Apnea-Hypopnea-Index (AHI). Secondary objectives are the detection of severe sleep disordered breathing in patients with clinically indicated in-laboratory polysomnography, as well as correlations of the AHI detected by ApneaScan with other clinical endpoints like mortality, hospitalization, atrial fibrillation and ventricular arrhythmia.

NCT ID: NCT01785199 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Effects of Head Elevation by a Bed on Sleep-disordered Breathing

Start date: October 2013
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Sleep is known to be a dynamic state of consciousness that is characterized by rapid fluctuations in autonomic activity as well as changes in body postures. Body postures during sleep influence the severity of sleep-disordered breathing because a supine position is associated with an increase in upper airway collapsibility and thus an increase in frequency and duration of snoring and apnea. Use of an adjustable bed to elevate patients' head might improve those conditions. The purpose of the present study is to determine whether use of an automatic adjustable bed is associated with reducing sleep-disordered breathing in patients with suspected obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) due to upper airway problems.