View clinical trials related to Syndrome.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to explore the pathophysiological effects of the persistently colonized microbiome in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: Question 1: the microbiome difference of the biofilm between IBS and healthy patients. Question 2: the metabolic product patterns between IBS and healthy patients. Participants will need to take a colonoscopy examination, two gut mucosal biopsy samples will be collected during the examination. Researchers will compare the IBS and healthy control groups to see if there was the disease-specific pattern in the microbiome and metabolic product of the biofilm.
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a clinical syndrome caused by intrapulmonary and/or extrapulmonary causes, characterized by intractable hypoxemia. Studies have shown that the sympathetic nervous system is over-activated in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome. A large retrospective study showed a reduction in mortality in ARDS patients treated with oral β1 blockers before admission, and this beneficial effect of β1 blockers applies to ARDS patients with or without cardiac disease. Esmolol is an ultra-short-acting selective β1 receptor blocker. Previous studies have shown that esmolol can improve oxygenation and reduce the levels of inflammatory cytokines and exudate proteins in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, thereby alleviating pulmonary injury. According to the literature and our previous clinical observations, we made the following hypothesis: When Estolol is applied to various ARDS patients undergoing mechanical ventilation in ICU, it can control the heart rate by inhibiting β-adrenergic receptor, which can ultimately improve the oxygenation index of patients and shorten the mechanical ventilation time. This project intends to include ARDS patients with optimal hemodynamic treatment for 24 hours, whose heart rate is still ≥95 beats/min after conventional treatment, but ≤120 beats/min. They are randomly divided into control group and Esmolol treatment group to study the effects of esmolol on patients' oxygenation index, mechanical ventilation time, hemodynamics, function of various organs and inflammation level. The aim of this study is to optimize the treatment of ARDS patients.
The goal of this observational study is to determine the relationship between Lymphedema and Myofascial Pain Syndrome in Breast Cancer Patients. The main questions it aims to answer: - Is there a relationship between the stage of lymphedema and the frequency of accompanying myofascial pain syndrome in the breast cancer patients? - Does the existence of lymphedema in breast cancer patients affect the distribution and the pain threshold values of trigger points seen in Myofascial Pain Syndrome? - What is the impact of Myofascial pain syndrome seen in breast cancer associted lymhedema patients on upper extremity function and quality of life?
This is a multi-center, retrospective clinical study to analyze the clinical features, laboratory indicators, imaging changes, treatment options and long-term prognosis in patients with sever fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome. All hospitalized patients with sever fever with thrombocytopenia diagnosed between 2016 and 2022 were included from the electronic medical record system of 8 centers, and demographics, hospitalization information, clinical information, laboratory or imaging examinations, treatment options, and outcomes were collected.
The study includes adult patients with SAPHO syndrome (ORPHA: 793), meeting the modified classification criteria according to Kahn (2003), with the ineffectiveness of standard treatment (patient's global assessment of the disease on the VAS scale greater than or equal to 4 cm with accompanying pain on the VAS scale greater than or equal to 4 cm) treated with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in a stable dose for at least 4 weeks and/or classical disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs in stable doses for at least 12 weeks.
The goal of this randomized study to test the efficacy of different doses of IVIG (intravenous immunoglobulin) in the treatment of severe HFRS(hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome), and provide new clinical ideas for the treatment and prognosis of HFRS patients in the future. This study will include all hospitalized patients with confirmed severe or critically ill HFRS from October 2021 to October 2023 from 9 centers. Participants will receive IVIG 10g/d or IVIG 20g/d. All the participants will be given conventional liquid therapy and symptomatic and supportive treatment. Participants will be collected demographic, epidemiological history, hospitalization information, clinical data, laboratory data, imaging results, treatment regimens, and outcomes data.
The primary objective of the study is to assess the performance of the French version of the Cerebellar Cognitive-Affective Syndrome Scale (CCASS) as a screening test for cerebellar cognitive-affective syndrome. The primary endpoint will be the sensitivity of version 1A of the French scale. The result will be considered positive if the patient fails at least one of the scale's subtests. The diagnosis of a cerebellar cognitive-affective syndrome will be made on the basis of a pathological score in the executive, language, visuospatial or psychoaffective domains of the neuropsychological evaluation (gold standard).
The Munich cohort study MUC-CFS aims at the characterization and long-term follow-up of myalgic encephalitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) in young people aged up to 25 years, as well as at the identification of pathomechanisms, biomarkers, and targets for future treatment approaches.
The Post-COVID syndrome is a COVID-19 sequelae disease with high individual burden. We conduct a prospective, two-arm, randomized-controlled intervention study with embedded qualitative and physiological sub-studies in a mixed-methods design.
This study will be a randomized controlled trial conducted to investigate the effect of release of upper track of deep front fascial line on patients with Upper Cross Syndrome.A sample size of 40 will be randomly allocated to two group ,(20 participants in each group), by using computer-generated random number list method. Experimental group will receive release of upper track of deep front fascial line in addition supervised corrective exercises for upper crossed syndrome and Control group which will receive supervised corrective exercise only. Both groups will receive eight sessions (2 sessions per week for 4 weeks).