Plain-English translation of NCT07451899 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This research study is trying to understand how tuberculosis affects teenagers' lungs long after they've been treated for the infection. Researchers want to see if there's a connection between the type of TB a teen had, how well their lungs work (measured by breathing tests), and how much physical activity they can do. The goal is to better understand why some teens continue to have breathing problems even after TB treatment is finished.
Many teenagers who recover from TB continue to experience shortness of breath, fatigue, and trouble with everyday activities for months or years afterward. Doctors don't fully understand why some teens are more affected than others, so this study aims to find patterns that might help identify and better treat these long-term breathing problems.
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You would visit the hospital once for testing. First, you'll do breathing tests where you breathe into a special machine several times to measure how well your lungs work. Then you'll take a 6-minute walk test to see how far you can walk and how your body responds to exercise. The entire visit should take a few hours, and there are no medications or ongoing treatments involved—just measurements and observation.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 3, 2026 · Not medical advice
Indonesia
Enrollment target
~20 participants
Started
March 2026
Primary completion
May 2026
This trial's estimated completion date has passed — the record may not be fully up to date.
Age range
10 Years – 18 Years
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in May 2026.
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Central contact
Irma R Defi, MD, PhD
Hasan Sadikin General Hospital
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