Clinical Trial Publication Type
Mostrando 1-4 de 4 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. Impacto da mudança de estilo de vida no perfil pró-aterosclerótico em crianças e adolescentes com sobrepeso e obesidade / Impact of life style changing in the pro-atherosclerotic profile in children and adolescents with overweight and obesity
This hypothesis was developed by reason of another research (COSTA G.B. Importance of the obesity increasing cardiovascular risk factors in children and adolescents. Aracaju, 2002. 109p.), in which pro-atherosclerotic profile was determined. At this current survey a controlled clinical trial was performed in fifty-two subjects, aged 10 to 18 years, all of th
Publicado em: 2007
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2. Intervenção fisioterapêutica na assistência ao trabalho de parto / Physiotherapy intervention during labor
Obstetrics intervention during labor involves a continuous up date on childbirth safety. Thus, vertical positions and free movements of woman, have been rediscovered as an efficient practice, to make easy the evolution of labor. Parallelly, there is a worldwide opinion supporting natural childbirth, despite the high scores of cesarean section in our country.
Publicado em: 2007
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3. Avaliação da eficácia da injeção da vacina de DNA HSP65 do Mycobacterium leprae em pacientes com estádio avançado de carcinoma epidermóide de cabeça e pescoço, em ensaio clínico de fase I/II / Effectiveness evaluation of the injection of the vaccine of DNA HSP65 of Mycobacterium leprae in patients with advanced stage head and neck squamous cell carcinoma in a phase I/II trial
Introduction: The squamous cell carcinoma of the head and advanced neck is an disease difficult to treat. Despite the advances in diagnosis and treatment in last the 30 years had not occurred major survival improvements. The treatment failure occurs mainly locorregionaly and recurrences frequently canot be rescued. immunotherapy has had encouraging results i
Publicado em: 2007
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4. A surplus of positive trials: weighing biases and reconsidering equipoise
In this issue, Fries and Krishnan raise provocative new ideas to explain the surfeit of positive industry sponsored trials evaluating new drugs. They suggest that these trials were designed after so much preliminary work that they were bound to be positive (design bias) and that this violates clinical equipoise, which they characterize as an antiquated conce
BioMed Central.