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Beneficial effects of exercise done before prostate cancer surgery
Expand descriptionThe primary objective was to determine the benefits of a pre-surgical exercise programme for prostate cancer patients scheduled for prostatectomy. It was hypothesised that: i) between baseline and pre-surgery, patients would demonstrate – higher physical functional performance, maintain higher levels of muscle strength and endurance, ii) during the weeks following surgery, patients would demonstrate – reduced physical functional performance, reduced muscular strength and endurance iii) between baseline and post-surgery, patients would demonstrate – improved recovery with a higher physical functional performance, maintain higher muscular strength and endurance.
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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Comorbid Anxiety and Sleep Disorders: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Expand descriptionThe purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy of a cognitive behavioural treatment (CBT-A-A-SRP) for comorbid anxiety and sleep-related problems in adolescents. The study will also include concurrent parent sessions (CBT-P-A-SRP). It is hypothesised that adolescents who received the CBT-A-A-SRP intervention will demonstrate a significantly larger reduction in anxiety symptoms and sleep-related problems compared to adolescents in the waitlist condition.
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Regular dental visits by public dental patients and impact on services provided and resource consumption in South Australia
Expand descriptionThe aim of the study is to examine the impact on dental health of being recalled for a dental check-up at a specified interval.
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Home-based, tailored intervention for reducing falls after stroke: the Falls After Stroke Trial (FAST)
Expand descriptionThe aim of the Falls After Stroke Trial (FAST) is to test the effect of home-based, tailored intervention to reduce falls. A sample of community-dwelling stroke survivors who have finished formal rehabilitation, and therefore are at a high risk of falling again will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: an experimental group (habit-forming exercise and safety training), or a control group (usual care which is no active intervention). The primary hypothesis is that the home-based, tailored intervention will be effective in reducing both the proportion of people falling and rate of falls over a one-year period in stroke survivors living in the community. The secondary hypotheses are: 2. That home-based, tailored intervention will also be effective in improving: balance, self-efficacy, mobility, physical activity, community participation, and health-related quality of life. 3. That home-based, tailored intervention will reduce healthcare utilisation and be cost-effective.
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An imaging study of 64Cu-SARTATE using positron emission tomography in patients with neuroendocrine tumours
Expand descriptionThe primary purpose of this study is to examine the safety and potential effectiveness of a drug molecule called 64Cu-SARTATE as a potential new way to detect neuroendocrine cancers. Who is it for? You may be eligible to join this study if you are aged 18 years or over, have a life expectancy of 8 weeks or more and Low and Intermediate Grade (Ki-67 index <20%) neuroendocrine tumors (NET). Study details: All participants in this study will be injected with a single dose of 64Cu-SARTATE (a drug molecule). The study lasts for one week and the patient is administered 1 dose of the drug followed by whole body PET scans at 30mins, 1hr, 4hrs, & 24hrs. Complete safety evaluations will occur during visit 2 (day 2) & visit 3 (day 8). These scans will be compared to the current PET imaging standard called 68Ga-DOTATATE which you will have recently received as a standard procedure. It is hoped that this research will help to develop a product which is more accurate for the diagnosis of neuroendocrine tumours in patients.
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Monitoring the motion of lung tumours with kilovoltage intrafraction monitoring
Expand descriptionThis study is investigating the feasibility of providing a direct measure of lung tumour motion during radiotherapy treatment, using existing standard treatment equipment. Who is it for? You may be eligible to join this study if you are aged 18 years or above, have been diagnosed with lung cancer and are a Patient with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) or small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Study details All patients in this study undergoing radiotherapy will have markers implanted into and around lung tumours using an airway ultrasound technique known as Endoscopic Bronchial Ultrasound (EBUS). The procedure has a duration of about 45 minutes. Then patients wait 2 weeks before continuing to routine radiotherapy simulation and planning. Treatment planning typically takes 2-3 weeks and then treatment will commence. The inserted markers are visualised and tracked using x-ray images, during the radiotherapy treatment sessions, once a week. This study aims to validate a method to record real-time tumour motion due to respiration, during lung cancer radiotherapy treatment. Identifying the motion in real-time will help to implement treatments that can track tumours, resulting in safer and more effective treatments.
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The Effect of Physiotherapy Integrated Motivational Interviewing and Smartphone Technology to Increase Physical Activity in Patients with Low Back Pain: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial
Expand descriptionThis trial will aim to determine if smartphone based Motivational Interviewing supplemented with Motivational Interviewing provided during usual physiotherapy care can increase activity in patients with sub-acute low back pain.
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Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation: the Influence of Gender and Menstrual Phase
Expand descriptionNon-invasive brain stimulation is emerging as a therapeutic tool for many brain related conditions. There are numerous non-invasive brain stimulation techniques that apply electrical or electromagnetic stimulation to the brain in different ways to alter neural activity. The most researched, and consequently best developed, of these are transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). Both TMS and tDCS has been shown to have varying degrees of therapeutic efficacy for major depression. Research efforts are currently focused on identifying factors that modulate individual differences in the way the brain response to TMS which could lead to development of optimised protocols for stimulation delivery. There is evidence that sex hormones may modulate the effect of TMS and tDCS. However very few studies have investigated this and none have focused on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, the site that both methods are most often applied in a clinical context. The current project is an investigation of the impact of gender, and within female gender of menstrual phases associated with high and low estrogen, on the effect of TMS and tDCS to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
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Does injection of local anaesthetic into the joint after total knee replacement affect range of motion?
Expand descriptionThe purpose of this study is to investigate whether our standard practice of injecting local anaesthetic into the knee joint for total knee replacements impacts knee range of motion at 6 weeks post operation for total knee replacement. We hypothesize that local infiltration analgesia during operation in total knee replacements negatively impacts the knee range of motion.
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The COLDICE Trial: Cryobiopsy versus Open Lung biopsy in the Diagnosis of Interstitial lung disease allianCE
Expand descriptionThe transbronchial lung cryobiopsy is a new, minimally invasive technique for obtaining lung tissue to diagnose ILD. In order to determine the place of cryobiopsy in ILD diagnostic algorithms and international guidelines, it is crucial that this procedure is validated against the current gold-standard practice, the VATS biopsy. This study brings together a team of leading proceduralists, ILD specialists and histopathologists from across Australia, with consultative input from international leaders in the field. The main objective of this project is to determine the role of cryobiopsy in the diagnosis of ILD.