Clinical Trials Logo

Yellow Fever clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Yellow Fever.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT00723489 Completed - Atopic Dermatitis Clinical Trials

Immune Response to Yellow Fever Vaccination in Adults With Atopic Dermatitis

Start date: August 2008
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The main objective of the Atopic Dermatitis and Vaccinia Immunization Network (ADVN) is to reduce the risk of the fatal reaction, eczema vaccinatum (EV), to the smallpox vaccination in those with atopic dermatitis (AD). Since vaccination with live vaccinia virus (VV) in individuals with AD increases the risk of EV, a yellow fever vaccine was chosen. The purpose of this study is to determine the immune response to a yellow fever vaccine in adults with AD.

NCT ID: NCT00708630 Completed - Vaccination Clinical Trials

The Effect of Extended Yellow Fever Vaccine Information on Symptom Reports Following Vaccination

Start date: June 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to investigate the effect of providing additional information about possible mild side effects of the yellow fever vaccination on the reporting of physical symptoms. Additionally, the project aims to investigate the relationship between individual characteristics (trait anxiety and perceived sensitivity to medication) and the reporting of physical symptoms, as well as possible interactions between the level of information provided and individual characteristics. We hypothesize that more information about mild symptoms provided to participants will increase the number of reported symptoms after vaccination.

NCT ID: NCT00694655 Recruiting - Yellow Fever Clinical Trials

Human Immune Responses to Yellow Fever Vaccination

Start date: May 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to use the live attenuated Yellow Fever Vaccine as a safe and effective model for viral infection to understand human immune response to viral antigens. Study participants will receive the yellow fever vaccine and participation in the study may be as short as one month or as long as one year, depending on immune responses.

NCT ID: NCT00616356 Completed - Yellow Fever Clinical Trials

Characterization of T Cell Responses Following Yellow Fever Virus Vaccination in Healthy Adults

Start date: December 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The investigators at Rockefeller University are doing this research to study how the immune system responds to viruses and other infectious agents by using the yellow fever 17D vaccine as a model. The YFV-17D vaccine is one of the safest and most effective vaccines known and has been used to vaccinate humans against yellow fever virus (YFV) infection since the 1930s. By studying how the human immune system responds to the YFV vaccine we hope to learn more about the normal functioning of the immune system so that it might be possible to design new, more effective types of vaccines to prevent important infectious diseases. The reason for doing this research is: Currently there is very little information about which factors determine the effectiveness of the initial (primary) immune response to a foreign substance (antigen), such as a virus, that person may be exposed to. There is also very little known about what determines how effectively and for how long a person's immune system can react to the same antigen to prevent another infection. Studies in animals have given us important information about how the immune systems of other animals behave upon initial or repeated exposure to antigens,but these topics have not been studied in detail in humans. The following hypotheses will be tested: - The magnitude of the initial expansion of T lymphocytes (the "clonal burst") specific for the infecting virus determines the level at which memory T cell responses are generated against the specific viral antigen and the duration of the memory T cell response generated in the body. - The majority of CD8 T cells generated after immunization are yellow fever specific and not "bystander activation" of non-specific cells.

NCT ID: NCT00254826 Completed - Viremia Clinical Trials

Yellow Fever Virus Vaccine and Immune Globulin Study

Start date: June 2006
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether immune globulin can limit the amount of yellow fever vaccine virus present in the blood after vaccination without compromising the immunity associated with the yellow fever vaccine. The study will enroll 80 participants in two groups of 40 each. The first group will receive the yellow fever vaccine with salt-water placebo. The second group will receive yellow fever vaccine with immune globulin. The amount of vaccine virus and immune response in both groups will be compared. Yellow fever vaccine has been used to protect humans against Yellow Fever Vaccine disease since the 1930s.