View clinical trials related to Syndrome.
Filter by:The purpose of the current project is to test the impact of transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS) on social ability in children with Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS). Social ability and blood neuropeptides associated with social functioning will be measured before and after engagement in 12 weeks of tVNS therapy.
This study is a prospective multicenter, placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized study to assess the effect of one dose ACI-24 versus placebo over a 74-week treatment period and 26-week safety follow-up period.
There are no strategies developed post-stem cell transplant (SCT) for patients who receive allogenic SCT with a significant amount of blasts prior SCT. Novel strategies to treat relapsed AML/MDS and to reduce the incidence of relapse after allogeneic SCT are needed. This study is being done in patients with high-risk MDS or AML who undergo an allogeneic SCT. The study will have two arms, participants who receive an HLA-matched unrelated donor SCT (Arm A) or HLA- haploidentical SCT (Arm B). Following myeloablative conditioning (MAC), GVHD prophylaxis with post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy), tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil will be given per standard of care. At 40-60 days post SCT, If the patient has not had any evidence of Grade II-IV acute graft-versus-host-disease (aGVHD), Nivolumab will be given intravenously every 2 weeks for 4 cycles of consolidation or treatment with Nivolumab. Dose-escalation of Nivolumab will follow the standard 3+3 design where a maximum of three dose levels will be evaluated, with a maximum of 18 patients treated with nivolumab per arm. As the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of Nivolumab may differ between Arm A and Arm B, dose escalation of nivolumab in each arm will be followed separately following allogeneic SCT. Immunosuppression with tacrolimus will be continued during the cycles of PD-1 blockade to provide a moderate level of GVHD prophylaxis during consolidation or treatment with nivolumab.
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the most common genetic cause of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The investigators wish to examine brain distribution of sigma-1 receptors in young adult males with FXS using 18F-FTC-146 PET. This project will study the distribution of sigma-1 receptors in 15 young (18-30 years) male adults with FXS compared to 5 healthy adult volunteers.
The aim of the study is to establish whether the safety of the T-MACS decision aid to immediately 'rule out' acute coronary syndromes with one blood sample for the cardiac damage marker troponin, is non-inferior to an approach requiring serial troponin sampling over three hours.
The investigators want to compare the global response rate of patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) after six months of treatment with 5-azacitidine on two different doses. First group of 50 mg/m2 for 10 days each 28 days versus 75 mg/m2 for 7 days on 28 days cycles.
Coronary heart disease is a partial inability of the coronary arteries to supply the heart muscle due to their narrowing. There is angina and myocardial infarction. Coronary heart disease is the first cause of non-communicated deaths and years of life lost. After hospital discharge, a few days following the acute care of a coronary heart disease, a formal Cardiac Rehabilitation programme (CR) is usually provided. CR is a comprehensive programme involving exercise training, risk factor modification, education and psychological support. It is generally sequenced in 4 phases. Phase 1 begins at the hospital and consists of early mobilisation and education. Most phase 2 CR models are based upon supervised ambulatory outpatient programmes. Maintenance (phase 3 and 4) follows the ambulatory programme in which physical fitness and risk factor control are supported in a minimally supervised setting. Despite high-grade recommendations and abundant clinical evidence, a CR program is not always implemented and the patients are not systematically referred after discharge from a phase 1 CR. Furthermore, compliance to pharmacological treatments and changes in lifestyle and diet are hugely neglected following a phase 2 CR and an important number of patients resume a sedentary lifestyle. A growing body of evidence supports the use of digital tools such as smartphones and tablets in helping the patients achieve their goals in terms of physical exercise, risk-factor reduction and diet improvement. Ad Scientiam has developed CardiCare™, a mobile application intended to provide a personalised physical training plan contributing to stabilise or improve cardiorespiratory fitness through improvement of VO2max. The mobile application CardiCare™ is to be used by patients after an acute coronary syndrome, graduated from a phase 2 cardiac rehabilitation program in a cardiac rehabilitation centre and entering in phase 3 CR. The mobile application CardiCare™ consists of several modules: - A physical activity recommendation engine, providing personalised weekly activity schedule, self-adapting to the patient's clinical characteristics, physical capacity and sport preferences through a proprietary algorithm - Self-administered questionnaires to assess perceived exertion, chest pain, weight variations, patient's quality of life - Passive monitoring of the patient's physical activity through Apple's HealthKit and Google's Fit - Informational content about cardiovascular diseases, risk factor reduction and chest pain action plan The investigator's work hypothesis is that, compared to standard care, CardiCare™ will stabilise or improve the cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2max) acquired post-CR.
The investigators will enroll 104 patients with severe COVID-19 infection that mechanical ventilation is needed for respiratory support. Patients will be randomized to receive either inhaled nitric oxide (per protocol) or a placebo. ICU Standards of care will be the institution's own protocols (such as ventilation strategies and use and dose of antivirals and antimicrobials, steroids, inotropic and vasopressor agents).
This is a single center, Phase 1/2 study in which patients with Hurler syndrome who have previously undergone allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation are treated with autologous plasmablasts engineered to express α-L-iduronidase (IDUA) using the Sleeping Beauty transposon system.
This study will address the value of adding intralipid infusion in reducing pregnancy complications related to antiphospholipid syndrome