Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Browse 1,562 clinical trials for copd. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
Find trials near:
Showing 1161-1180 of 1,562 trials
NCT00446667
COPD is a major cause of ill health and death in Australia with 40,000 hospital admissions, and a national cost of $898,000,000 annually. The gold standard treatment of COPD is steroids for inflammation, antibiotics for infection and bronchodilators and oxygen for respiratory failure. However, associated mucus hypersecretion is responsible for much of the inflammation and infection. The use of pharmaceutical agents to assist in the early clearance of the retained mucus has been limited, primarily because of lack of demonstrated effect. There has been a recent development of interest in pursuing new therapies for improving mucociliary clearance and several studies have demonstrated that clinical outcomes can be improved when osmotic agents such as mannitol are added to standard treatments. The purpose of this study is to conduct a pilot safety study in patients with an acute exacerbation of COPD to determine if it is safe to administer inhaled mannitol for facilitating mucus clearance.
NCT02413359
The patients with complications of COPD and asthma have features mixed with two diseases, COPD and asthma. Therefore, the outcomes are worsened if the patients with COPD have symptoms overlapped with asthma, however, no sufficient data exist in Japan for estimating the prevalence of ACOS in patients with COPD. The primary objective of this NIS is to clarify the proportion of ACOS defined by GINA and GOLD in patients with COPD. The main secondary objectives are To explore the features of history of COPD exacerbations, symptoms, eosinophilic inflammation and patient background in patients with ACOS, to clarify the history of COPD exacerbations in patients with COPD, to evaluate the degrees of eosinophilic inflammation of the respiratory tract in patients with COPD and to evaluate the symptoms in patients with COPD. This is a cross-sectional study targeting COPD patients receiving outpatient treatment and follow-up by physicians in Japan. FSI is scheduled as 2Q 2015 and DBL would be locked by 3Q 2015.