
The CArdiac Imaging RegistrY Study
Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)In this prospective longitudinal observational investigator-led single centre cohort study we will include patients undergoing cardio-CT for clinical reasons, to evaluate the role of cardio-CT terms of its diagnostic and prognostic value, as well as risk-benefit ratio. Particular aims include: To determine the prevalence of CAD for age, gender, ethnicity relative to established risk models To determine associations between CAD severity and plaque type and: with traditional risk factors (arterial hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, smoking) blood markers of increased cardiovascular risk To determine predictive associations of between CAD with outcome (endpoint definitions in appendix) To determine the risk-benefit ratio (number of subsequent interventions, complications, radiation exposure, late onset of cancer diseases, etc).

Effect of a High Intensity Interval Training in Older Adults With Coronary Artery Disease
Heart DiseasesA study comparing 2 groups: interval training and control group. Interval training group will perform a physiotherapy program based in exercises, at a high intensity, and stretching of muscles at the end. Control group will not perform any physiotherapy program. Several parameters will be evaluated at baseline, 2 months and 6 months: anxiety, depression, functional capacity, blood pressure, lipid profile, physical activity, ecc.

Dynamic Coronary Roadmap for Contrast Reduction
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe Dynamic Coronary Roadmap is a commercially available product developed by Philips Medical Systems, a Philips Healthcare company. Dynamic Coronary Roadmap is a software medical device intended to provide a real-time and dynamic angiographic roadmap of coronary arteries. The angiographic roadmap is automatically generated from previously acquired coronary angiograms during the same procedure. Dynamic Coronary Roadmap overlays the angiographic roadmap on live 2D fluoroscopic images, thereby assisting the physician in navigating devices, e.g. (guide) wires, catheters, through the coronary arteries. This is a multi-center, prospective, unblinded, stratified 1:1 randomized controlled trial to assess whether using Dynamic Coronary Roadmap reduces the total iodinated contrast volume related to PCI compared to the control group without Dynamic Coronary Roadmap.

SORT-OUT V - Randomised Clinical Comparative Study of the Nobori and the Cypher Stent.
Coronary Artery DiseaseAngina PectorisTo perform a randomized comparison between the Cypher Select+ stent and the Nobori stent in the treatment of unselected patients with ischaemic heart disease.

Randomized Comparison of Endocardial Versus Epicardial - From the Coronary Sinus - Left Ventricular...
Heart FailureCardiomyopathy2 moreBiventricular pacing is a validated treatment for patients suffering from heart failure resistant to medical treatment. However, up to 30% of the patients are non responsive to this strategy using the coronary sinus approach to pace the Left Ventricle (LV). It has been demonstrated that the magnitude of the improvement was highly dependant on the LV pacing site. The coronary sinus approach rarely offers more than 1 or 2 potential pacing sites. Resynchronisation using a transeptal approach to pace the left ventricle on the cardiology has been shown feasible on small series. We therefore would like to compare these two approached in a randomised prospective study to confirm the hypotheses that endocardial LV pacing by offering multiple choices for the pacing sites reduces the number of non responders and is associated with greater hemodynamic benefit when compared to the conventional coronary sinus approach.

The E-SERIES Registry for Supralimus® Coronary Stent for the Treatment of Unselected Patients With...
Coronary Artery DiseaseE-SERIES Registry evaluate the procedural and clinical outcomes of the Supralimus® SES in the treatment of unselected, high risk patients having coronary Artery blockage in the real world clinical practice.

ABSORB II Randomized Controlled Trial
Coronary Artery DiseaseProspective, randomized (2:1), active control, single blinded, parallel two-arm, multi-center clinical investigation using Abbott Vascular ABSORB Everolimus Eluting Bioresorbable Vascular Scaffold System (ABSORB BVS); compared to Abbott Vascular XIENCE Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System (XIENCE)

A Study to Examine the Implantation Characteristics of Two Drug-Eluting Stents
Coronary Artery DiseaseDespite recent advances in stent technology and clot reducing drug therapy, acute stent occlusion or thrombosis (ST), still occurs and can be life threatening. It has been shown that certain features of how the stent relates to the artery wall may predict ST. One such feature, so-called stent strut malapposition (SSM), can be assessed after implantation but current imaging techniques are relatively unreliable. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) is a newer technology that can be performed safely and easily after angioplasty and may allow the stent struts to be assessed more accurately and reliably. This study will use OCT to examine how two different types of commonly used drug-eluting stents relate to the artery wall. The Xience V (Abbott Vascular, USA) stent has thinner struts and a more open frame than the Cypher (Cordis, USA) stent. We hypothesise therefore that the potentially more pliable structure of the Xience V stent will be associated with greater contact with the vessel wall. This may have a bearing on the relative rate of SSM, although large studies have shown the rate to be low in both the Cypher and the Xience V stent. We believe that OCT imaging of SSM and symmetry of the stent immediately after angioplasty will compliment conventional visual assessment and may identify those patients in whom further improvement of stent with a balloon is necessary. This study will involve the random allocation of forty patients requiring coronary angioplasty to one of the Cypher or Xience V stent. The procedure will be performed in the usual manner as indicated clinically and will include imaging of the stented artery segment with OCT once the operator is satisfied with the visual result by angiography.

Z-SEA-SIDE: Sirolimus Versus Everolimus Versus Zotarolimus-eluting Stent Assessment in Bifurcated...
Coronary Artery DiseaseCoronary StenosisBACKGROUND: Bifurcated lesions are a challenging subset in percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). The selection of the type of drug-eluting stents (DES) and the technique for stent implantation have not been clarified. The side-branch (SB) is emerging as critical point, accounting for more than a third of the significant restenosis in the DES era. A series of data supports the adoption of a conservative strategy: stenting the main vessel (MV) only and reserving a conservative approach on the SB. Yet, the clinical relevance in terms of inducible ischemia of sub-optimal angiographic result has not been clarified. AIMS OF THE STUDY: The aims of the present study are: to compare in a prospective study the acute 3D angiographic results and the late clinical outcome of Sirolimus-eluting (SES) vs Everolimus-eluting (EES) vs Zotarolimus eluting stent (ZES) obtained using a provisional TAP-stenting technique. to prospectively assess the clinical relevance (inducible ischemia) of suboptimal angiographic result in the SB after stenting. METHODS TO BE APPLIED: 75 consecutive patients with bifurcated lesions undergoing PCI with the provisional T-and-small-protruding (TAP) technique with ZES implantation will be enrolled. Procedural and post-PCI details will be prospectively recorded. The subgroup of patients in which complete revascularization has been achieved will enter a systematic assessment of inducible ischemia by early and late exercise tests. Off line 3D quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) assessment will be performed and used to divide the study population in 2 groups according to the SB residual stenosis: Group O (optimal SB angiographic result): post-PCI SB area stenosis<50% Group S (sub-optimal SB angiographic result): post-PCI SB area stenosis>50%. For the comparison among SES and EES, data will be obtained from the randomized trial SEA-SIDE (NCT00697372). PRIMARY STUDY END-POINTS. COMPARISON BETWEEN ZES, SES AND EES: SB acute angiographic result; SB trouble; target bifurcation failure. SB-RELATED ISCHAEMIA of Group O vs Group S in patients with complete revascularization: inducible ischemia at the early exercise test or occurrence of early spontaneous ischemia related to the SB.

Clinical Feature and Outcome of Angiographic Coronary Artery Disease in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients...
Coronary Artery DiseaseChronic Kidney DiseaseThe prevalence and mortality rate of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients is high. The prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) in CKD population ranges from 38 to 65%, with an average of 3.3 coronary lesions per person. The relative risk for death from myocardial infarction and CAD is 1.18 in CKD patients with GFR < 60 ml/min. Because of this high prevalence of CAD and its high mortality, reducing and preventing CAD risk factors is crucial in the clinical management of CKD patients. Low glomerular filtration rate (GFR) constitutes an important independent risk factor for CAD. Several pathogenic factors play role in the genesis of cardiovascular dysfunction in chronic kidney disease. Increased traditional CAD risk factor, endothelial dysfunction, sympathetic hyperactivity, renin-angiotensin system activation, increased glycosylated end products, all contribute to the characteristic medial calcification of cardiovascular disease in CKD patients. Hypertension, fluid overloading and anemia further aggravated the cardiac loading, leading to myocardial hypertrophy with chamber dilatation, heart failure and death. The mortality rate of CAD in CKD patients is extremely high. The NHANES II (National Health and Nutritional Evaluation Survey) found an increased of mortality rate> 51%, when the GFR decreased from > 90 to < 70 ml/min. The 1-year mortality rate in different CKD stage were 0.7% (normal renal function patients), 2.0% (patients with proteinuria), 3.5% (overt proteinuric patients) and 12.1% (dialysis patients), respectively. However, the clinical feature and outcome of CAD in different stage of CKD remains unclear. We conducted a retrospective cohort study involving all patients admitted for coronary angiography from 1992 to 2004. The patients were categorized into five stages of CAD to compare the risk factor, clinical feature and outcome. Determination of this relationship can help to establish factors for early detection of CAD in CKD patients and also prognostic factor to improve outcome of these patients.