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Browse 1,501 clinical trials for copd. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT03457103
Capnometry-Assisted Breathing Training for COPD (CATCH) is a behavioral intervention that aims to promote optimal, self-regulated, mindful breathing. A portable capnometer is used in-session to provide continuous visual feedback of Respiratory Rate (RR), End-Tidal Carbon Dioxide Tension (ETCO2), and breathing pattern. The tailored CATCH intervention will emphasize a slow, quiet, regular, nasal breathing pattern, as well as pursed lips breathing (PLB). CATCH is once weekly for 6 weeks, for a total of 6 sessions; each session is approximately 60 minutes long. The principal investigator will implement the CATCH intervention. The principal investigator will implement the CATCH intervention. Patients will use the Address Stress app on a smart phone or computer tablet as part of their home breathing exercises.
NCT05007574
Aging of the population is dramatically increasing the number of hospitalized patients, with the consequent challenges of limited medical personnel and resources in hospitals. Wireless technologies that create highly connected healthcare environments are developed to help hospitals address these issues, once these technologies are perfectly integrated in the hospital environment with respect to IT infrastructure for big data storage. Such devices have proven remarkable efficiencies in monitoring patients with high patient safety, data accuracy and security, which are essential to provide high quality patient care, reduce health-related costs and optimize the management of high numbers of patients. Cough is the most common condition that results in a visit to the physician. Often coughs are benign, but sometimes can be the sign of exacerbations of a chronic respiratory disease. Exacerbations are defined in the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) document "as an acute event characterised by a worsening of the patient's respiratory symptoms that is beyond normal day-to-day variations and leads to a change in medication". It is assumed that, if coughs were remotely monitored, hospitals might be unburdened, patients would be empowered to self-manage their health, and that prevention of serious respiratory diseases might be facilitated, thus improving health outcomes. Unfortunately, remote monitoring for cough that rely on self-reporting is impractical, as patients do not record data very reliably. On the contrary, a microphone on the bedside table connected to a medical data analysis platform might monitor patients' cough exacerbations at night and alert the medical staff immediately.