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Active clinical trials for "Angina Pectoris"

Results 181-190 of 454

DANish Multicenter STENT Trial

Ischemic Heart DiseaseStable Angina1 more

The purpose of the study was to evaluate procedural and late outcome of coronary artery stenting using 2 different unmounted stents

Completed5 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Mobilized Stem Cell by G-CSF and VEGF Gene Therapy in Patients With Stable Severe...

Ischemic Heart Disease

The aim of this study was to evaluate the mobilization of non-haematopoietic mesenchymal and haematopoietic stem cells from the bone marrow with granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) treatment alone and in combination with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) gene therapy in patients with severe chronic occlusive coronary artery disease.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Heterogeneity of Neointimal Healing Following Biodegradable-polymer Drug-Eluting Coronary Stent...

Coronary Heart DiseaseStable Angina Pectoris1 more

The objective of this study is a comparative evaluation of Orsiro stent and of Resolute Integrity stent in terms of the extent of neointima formation at 4 months after implantation using optical coherence tomography (OCT).

Completed15 enrollment criteria

DUrable Polymer-based STent CHallenge of Promus Element Versus ReSolute Integrity in an All Comers...

Acute Coronary SyndromeAngina Pectoris6 more

The introduction of drug-eluting stents (DES) in the treatment of coronary artery disease has led to a significant reduction in morbidity but there are further demands on DES performance. Such demands are an optimized performance in very challenging coronary lesions; third generation DES were developed in an effort to further improve DES performance in such challenging lesions. Two CE-certified third generation DES (Resolute Integrity and Promus Element stents) are currently available; there are no data that indicate an advantage of one of these DES over the other.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of iFR vs FFR in Stable Angina or Acute Coronary Syndrome

Angina PectorisAcute Myocardial Infarction

Previous trials have demonstrated that the use of physiological assessment of stenosis severity using fractional flow reserve (FFR) is superior to angiographic assessment in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and improves clinical outcome. Despite the clinical utility, FFR is used only in 10-15% of patients today. The main reasons for the low adoption rate of FFR are the prolonged procedural time, Adenosine related discomfort and cost associated with Adenosine. Instantaneous Wave-Free ratio (iFR®) is a novel method to assess coronary lesions for functional significance. The main benefits of the method compared to FFR are that the measurement is instantaneous and does not require Adenosine infusion. Thus, the patient does not experience any discomfort from the measurement and procedural time could be shortened compared to when using FFR. This could potentially increase the adoption rate of physiologic assessment of coronary lesions. The aim of this trial is to compare the clinical outcome of patients assessed by iFR® with patients assessed by FFR. Furthermore, the trial will be conducted as a registry based randomized clinical trial (RRCT) which is a novel strategy to conduct clinical trials. The randomization will occur online in the Swedish angiography and angioplasty registry (SWEDEHEART) using a web based platform.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

RRISC Study: Reduction of Restenosis In Saphenous Vein Grafts With Cypher Sirolimus-Eluting Stent....

Stable AnginaUnstable Angina2 more

Context: Sirolimus-eluting-stents have improved the benefits of percutaneous interventions in native coronary arteries reducing the occurrence of restenosis and repeated revascularization, however saphenous vein grafts have been always excluded form randomized trials. Objective: To evaluate the angiographic and clinical impact of sirolimus-eluting-stents with respect to bare-metal-stents in degenerated vein grafts. Design: Double-blind randomized controlled non-industry-sponsored trial. Setting: A single-center tertiary-care referral hospital. Patients: All patients are randomly allocated to sirolimus-eluting-stent implantation or the corresponding bare-metal-stent. All patients are followed clinically and repeated angiographic follow-up is performed in all at 6-months. Main outcome measure: Primary end-point is 6-months angiographic in-stent late loss. Secondary end-points include: binary angiographic in-stent and in-segment restenosis, intravascular-ultrasound-measured neo-intimal hyperplasia volume and all the clinical events (death, myocardial infarction, target-lesion and target-vessel revascularization).

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Nurses' Health Study (Cardiovascular Component)

Cardiovascular DiseasesDiabetes Mellitus8 more

To determine the relationships of hormonal, reproductive, dietary, and lifestyle factors, as well as biochemical and genetic factors, with the subsequent risk of coronary heart disease and other cardiovascular events in a cohort of female registered nurses. The current funding cycle involves comprehensive metabolomic profiling of coronary heart disease cases and controls and development of metabolomic risk scores for coronary heart disease.

Active1 enrollment criteria

Cell Therapy in Severe Chronic Ischemic Heart Disease

Chronic Ischemic Heart DiseaseCoronary Artery Disease1 more

Patients with advanced coronary artery disease usually undergo incomplete myocardial revascularization due to the extension and diffuseness of the disease, with very poor distal arterial beds unsuitable for direct revascularization. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that direct, intramyocardial injection of autologous bone marrow cells may further improve myocardial perfusion in patients undergoing incomplete bypass surgery.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Clinical Impact of the Withdrawal of Nitrate in Patients With Stable Angina

Stable AnginaMyocardial Ischemia1 more

Chronic treatment of stable angina with nitrates long and short action is extremely frequent. In clinical practice the most commonly observed is a combination of anti-anginal agents, usually including nitrates fixed in an attempt to improve the quality of life of patients, which is not always met with success. Numerous questions and problems are seen with chronic use of oral nitrates. From a practical standpoint, some advocate the withdrawal of medication in stable patients, while many physicians still hesitate to withdraw the medication by the lack of definitive information about its consequences. In this sense there is a rationale for the attempted removal of nitrate fixed these patients, although evidence to support this action have not been adequately evaluated.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Intracoronary Thrombus Detection by Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Angina PectorisAngina4 more

This study involves the use of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to determine whether blood clots can be identified within the blood vessels supplying blood to the heart in patients with angina and who have recently suffered a heart attack.

Suspended14 enrollment criteria
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