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NCT07138157
The study aims to compare the effects of two different exercise programs, based on distinct focus strategies, on physical fitness and fatigue in children and adolescents with rheumatic diseases. Participants will include individuals diagnosed with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA), Juvenile Dermatomyositis (JDM), and Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF), monitored at Istanbul University, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, in collaboration with Istanbul University-Cerrahpaşa, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation. After baseline assessments, participants will be randomly allocated into two groups. One group will receive an exercise program with commands and instructions emphasizing external focus, while the other group will follow a program emphasizing internal focus. Both exercise interventions will last for 8 weeks, consisting of two online supervised sessions and one home-based session per week under family supervision. Final evaluations will be conducted at the clinic after completion of the intervention period.
NCT05710640
The study is a multicenter, double-blind, sham-controlled trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of tcVNS on pain and inflammation associated with JIA. tcVNS is administered with a device that gives off mild electrical impulses through the skin to stimulate the vagus nerve. Part of the vagus nerve and its branches are located in the head and neck. For this study, the impulses will be administered using a small electrode at the cymba concha for participants receiving treatment with active tcVNS and at the neck for participants receiving sham stimulation. The electrode helps to conduct the stimulation through the skin. This stimulation triggers a chemical response through the nerves and has been found to be effective in reducing pain and inflammation in several diseases. The primary objective of this study is to determine the effect of tcVNS on JIA ACR 50 in participants with active JIA. The components of the active and sham tcVNS devices, utilizing the Roscoe Medical TENS 7000, have been FDA 510(k)-cleared and have been determined by the IRB to be a nonsignificant risk device.
NCT06591949
Cognitive Exercise Therapy Approach (\*Bilişsel Egzersiz Terapi Yaklaşımı\*-BETY), an innovative method developed for adults with rheumatism, aims to promote behavioral change and prevent social isolation by focusing on exercises that provide pain management and functional gains. BETY also recognizes the importance of family education in achieving these goals. However, there is a need for studies on exercise approaches that fit the biopsychosocial model, such as BETY in childhood rheumatic diseases. BETY is an innovative exercise approach based on the biopsychosocial model that aims to change the patient's cognitions through exercise, specifically developed for patients with rheumatism. This approach includes function-oriented trunk stabilization exercises, chronic pain management, and authentic dance therapy training targeting positive cognitive displacement. It is carried out in a routinized structure that continues for years on a face-to-face basis in groups and individually. Interventions that provide physical and psychosocial support are needed in childhood rheumatic diseases. Learning to exercise the muscles surrounding the joints at the proper traction angle through exercise with BETY, gaining the ability to manage chronic pain during the day, gaining positive cognitive displacement skills, and having the opportunity to socialize through both individual and group exercises constitute the basis of the intervention.
NCT05534347
The aim of the study is to determine whether serum inflammatory angiogenic markers (eg, semaphorins, CCN1) predict severity of juvenile idiopathic arthritis defined by structural progression and/or therapeutic escalation.
NCT03725007
This is a study to evaluate pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of upadacitinib in pediatric participants with polyarticular course juvenile idiopathic arthritis. This study consists of three parts: Part 1 is multiple-cohort study that consists of two sequential multiple dose groups. Participants benefiting from the study drug with no ongoing adverse events of special interest or serious adverse events will have option to enroll in Part 2. Part 2 is open-label, long term extension study to evaluate safety and tolerability. Part 3 is an additional safety cohort to evaluate long-term safety and tolerability.
NCT03245801
Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA) is a disorder of unknown cause characterized by chronic inflammation of the joints and other organs. It affects about 1 in a 1000 Canadian children and if untreated it can produce lifelong disability. The Canadian Alliance of Pediatric Rheumatology Investigators (CAPRI) includes most pediatric rheumatologists in Canada. They have successfully collaborated for the past 20 years producing groundbreaking research on the modern course and outcomes of JIA. The CAPRI JIA Registry is an ongoing universal registry of Canadian children with JIA that collects longitudinal data on disease course, outcomes and adverse events to inform healthcare decisions and to gain new insights into the disease and its treatment.
NCT01550003
A Multicenter, Open-label Study to Assess the Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Efficacy of Certolizumab Pegol in Children and Adolescents With Moderately to Severely Active Polyarticular-course Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA).