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Active clinical trials for "Coronary Artery Disease"

Results 2501-2510 of 4926

Web Based Cardiac Rehabilitation Support in Coronary Artery Patients

Cardiac RehabilitationHealthy Lifestyle3 more

This study was carried out as a randomized controlled experimental study to evaluate the effect of web-based cardiac rehabilitation support on the healthy lifestyle behaviors, medication adherence and quality of life in coronary heart patients.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Hemodynamic Effect of Topical Anesthesia During Induction in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery...

Coronary Artery DiseaseValvular Heart Disease1 more

Patients scheduled for cardiac surgery are fragile. Hemodynamic fluctuation might be associated with adverse outcomes. Therefore, it is essential to keep hemodynamics stable during and after the induction period. Previous studies have shown that topical anesthesia can provide excellent superior supraglottic and subglottic local anesthetic effects and can significantly reduce the dosage of intravenous anesthetics. Therefore, we designed this study to explore whether the combination of topical anesthesia and intravenous anesthetics could decrease the stress response of endotracheal intubation and keep hemodynamics stable during and after the induction period.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Comparative Response to Vascular Injury in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus: An OCT Study of BVS...

Coronary Artery DiseaseDiabetes Mellitus

Stents are used at centers around the world to unblock the arteries of the heart. These stents are usually made of metal and remain permanently within the blood vessel wall. Newer developments in the stent technology has led to stent scaffolds that can be reabsorbed over time. Patients with diabetes are prone to more complex blockages in the heart arteries which can be more difficult to treat. The purpose of this study is to compare the difference of how arteries heal early when metal stents or resorbable stents are used in patients with diabetes.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of a Prototype Smartphone Application of Personalized Care for Coronary Artery Disease...

Coronary Disease

This project will benefit from the results of the concept study conducted from July to October 2014 from groups of coronary patients. This first study will help to develop the precise contours of Appet HEART application for the production of the prototype version used in the clinical feasibility study. The objectives of the feasibility study are: assess the rate of use of the application to determine the ideal target population of the application to evaluate the effectiveness of the application to measure the risks and potential limitations of its use to determine the medical and economic impact of this application

Withdrawn2 enrollment criteria

Magnetic Resonance Adenosine Perfusion Imaging as Gatekeeper of Invasive Coronary Intervention

Stable Coronary Artery DiseaseCardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging4 more

Current guidelines for the diagnosis and management of patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD) strongly support the performance of non-invasive imaging techniques for the detection of myocardial ischemia prior to revascularization procedures. This recommendation originates from the strong evidence base showing the lack of prognostic benefit from percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) over optimal medical therapy in patients without verification of myocardial ischemia. On the other hand, it could be demonstrated that patients with functionally significant coronary artery stenoses do benefit from revascularization. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) has emerged to be a diagnostic modality of choice for the detection of myocardial ischemia with high sensitivity and specificity. The investigators therefore designed this prospective and randomized trial to compare a CMR-driven vs. angiography-driven management of patients with stable CAD concerning major cardiac endpoints, futile angiographies and quality of life.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Coronary Flow Reserve to Assess Cardiovascular Inflammation (CIRT-CFR)

Coronary Heart DiseaseMetabolic Syndrome1 more

Coronary flow reserve (CFR, calculated as the ratio of hyperemic over rest myocardial blood flow) is emerging as a powerful quantitative prognostic imaging marker of clinical cardiovascular risk. CFR provides a robust and reproducible clinical measure of the integrated hemodynamic effects of epicardial coronary artery disease (CAD), diffuse atherosclerosis, and microvascular dysfunction on myocardial tissue perfusion. Inflammation is a key mediator of this constellation of abnormalities, affecting the entire coronary vasculature, but no clinical trial to date has shown that directly reducing inflammation lowers cardiovascular event rates. As such, the recently launched Cardiovascular Inflammation Reduction Trial (CIRT) provides a unique opportunity for mechanistic investigation of the impact of anti-inflammatory therapy on changes in CFR as a reflection of coronary vascular dysfunction, which may precede clinical outcomes, particularly in patients at high-risk of events. The investigators are ideally positioned to examine the impact of inflammation on CFR, having extensive experience in both the quantitation of CFR using clinically-integrated dynamic positron emission tomography (PET) and the ability to assess its association with cardiovascular outcomes. The central hypothesis of this ancillary proposal, CIRT-CFR, is that reducing systemic inflammation using low-dose methotrexate (LDM) will, compared to placebo, quantitatively improve myocardial blood flow and coronary flow reserve as measured by PET over one year, in stable CAD patients with type 2 diabetes or metabolic syndrome enrolled in CIRT. In so doing, improvement in coronary vasoreactivity, endothelial function, and tissue perfusion may have beneficial effects on myocardial mechanics, left ventricular deformation and function and, ultimately, symptoms and prognosis.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Coronary Bifurcation Lesions Treated With Biguard Stent System

Coronary Artery Disease

This study is designed to test the hypothesis that the Biguard stent system will lead to fewer target lesion failure compared to regular stent system in patients with coronary bifurcation lesions at one year.

Withdrawn24 enrollment criteria

Cardio- and Renoprotective Effect of Remote Ischemic Preconditioning in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous...

Coronary Artery Disease

Myocyte necrosis occurs frequently in elective percutanious percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and is associated with subsequent cardiovascular events. This study assessed the cardio- and reno-protective effect of remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) in patients undergoing elective PCI. 200 patients were randomized into 2 groups: 100 patients received RIPC (created by three 5-minute inflations of a blood pressure cuff to 200 mm Hg around the upper arm, separated by 5-minute intervals of reperfusion) < 2 hours before the PCI procedure, and the control group (n = 100).

Completed5 enrollment criteria

SMBG Protocols Predicting Glucose Levels in Senior Diabetes Mellitus With CAD

Diabetes MellitusType 21 more

Self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) is a common way to assess glycemic control in diabetes management. Multiple times of blood glucose measurements by fingerstick in the same day are of tough challenge to it. The changes and variations of glucose excursion in senior diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)involve a safety issue besides glycated hemoglobin (GHb) value. The goal of this study is to explore modified SMBG protocols for precisely monitoring and predicting glycemic excursion, variability in senior type 2 diabetics with CAD.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Identification of Adverse Plaque Characteristics by Coronary MR Angiography

Coronary Artery Disease

This is a pilot study to determine whether coronary magnetic resonance angiography(CMRA)can identify adverse plaque characteristics (buildup of fat, cholesterol, calcium, and other substances found in the blood) seen on coronary computed tomography angiography(CCTA) and evaluate whether there is a relationship between the adverse plaque characteristics and the presence of coronary artery wall inflammation.

Completed17 enrollment criteria
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