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Active clinical trials for "Coronary Artery Disease"

Results 831-840 of 4926

Mainz Intracoronary Database. The Coronary Slow-flow and Microvascular Diseases Registry

Coronary Artery DiseaseMicrovascular Dysfunction

Primary goal of the registry is to collect prospective data on patients undergoing coronary angiography in Mainz. Following amendment of the procol, this study will also include patients who received an Aborb bioresorbable scaffold for the therapy of de novo stenoses.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Molecular and Imaging Studies of Cardiovascular Health and Disease

HealthyDilated Cardiomyopathy2 more

Biobank is a program which collects biological samples, health information and imaging data from consented patients and stored them at the core facility. These information would be used to study the molecular, imaging and outcome studies of cardiovascular health and disease.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Whole-Heart Myocardial Blood Flow Quantification Using MRI

Coronary Artery DiseaseCoronary Microvascular Disease

This study hopes to provide significant technical improvement in a Myocardial Blood Flow (MBF) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) quantification technique to address challenges and technical limitations for MBF CMR. By developing and validating novel techniques to improve first-pass perfusion (FPP) cardiac MR, we propose to increase diagnostic accuracy by minimizing false positives and false negatives, allow for better evaluation and accurate quantification of total ischemic burden and reduce image and motion-induced artifacts. The broad, long-term objective of the proposed project is to improve the prognosis of patients with myocardial ischemia caused by coronary artery disease (CAD) or coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD).

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Post-Operative Myocardial Incident & Atrial Fibrillation

Valve Heart DiseaseCoronary Artery Disease

To explore predictors of major cardio-vascular events after cardiac surgery and trans-catheter valve implantation with a specific interest in studying mechanisms linking pre-operative leukocyte, fat and myocardial phenotypes with post-intervention outcomes.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

MRI of Myocardial Infarction

Myocardial InfarctionMyocardial Ischemia9 more

Heart failure (HF) is an enormous health burden affecting approximately 5.1 million people in the US and is the cause of 250,000 deaths each year. Approximately 50% of HF is caused by myocardial ischemia and requires immediate restoration of coronary blood flow to the affected myocardium. However, the success of reperfusion is partly limited by intramyocardial hemorrhage, which is the deposition of intravascular material into the myocardium. Hemorrhagic reperfusion injury has high prevalence and patients have a much greater risk of adverse left ventricular remodeling, risk of fatal arrhythmia, impaired systolic function and are hospitalized at a greater rate. Recent magnetic resonance imaging techniques have improved assessment of reperfusion injury, however, the association between MRI contrasts and reperfusion injury is highly unclear, and lacks specificity to IMH. Improved imaging of IMH and accurate knowledge about its spatial and temporal evolution may be essential for delivery of optimal medical therapy in patients and critical to identify patients most at risk for adverse ventricular remodeling. The overall goal is to investigate the magnetic properties of hemorrhage and develop MRI techniques with improved specificity to hemorrhage. New MRI techniques permit noninvasive assessment of the magnetic susceptibility of tissues and can target tissue iron. Therefore, the investigators hypothesize that MRI imaging of myocardial magnetic susceptibility can map hemorrhagic myocardium. The investigators will perform a longitudinal observational study in patients after reperfusion injury to validate these methods, compare the methods with conventional MR contrasts and develop MR methods for imaging humans.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Frailty Syndrome in Daily Practice of Interventional Cardiology Ward

Frail Elderly SyndromeCoronary Heart Disease3 more

The impact of frailty on immediate and long term outcomes of invasive treatment of coronary artery disease is not fully characterized. The assessment of frailty may help physicians in the selection of best treatment option and in the timing and modality of the follow-up. The FRAilty syndrome in daily Practice of Interventional CArdiology ward (FRAPICA) study is designed with the aim to validate the use of the Fried frailty scale and instrumental activities of daily living scale (IADL) as prognostic tools in patients admitted to hospital for symptomatic coronary artery disease, either stable, unstable, or acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The FRAPICA study is a single center prospective study enrolling patients aged ≥65 years. The aims are (1) to describe Fried frailty scale and IADL scale distribution before hospital discharge and (2) to investigate the prognostic role of Fried frailty and IADL scores. The outcomes are: (1) results of invasive treatment, (2) its complications (periinterventional MI, contrast-induced nephropathy, blood loss), (3) three-year all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, stroke, myocardial infarction, reintervention, heart failure, hospital readmission for any cause, and a composite of the above mentioned. Ancillary analyses will be focused on different clinical presentations, different tools to assess frailty and risk stratification. The FRAPICA program will fill critical gaps in the understanding of the relation between frailty, cardiovascular disease, interventional procedures and outcome. It will enable more personalized risk assessment and identification of new targets for interventions.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Registry of Multicenter Brain-Heart Comorbidity in China

Ischemic Heart DiseaseCardiac Arrest11 more

This study is a multi-center, prospective, registry study. This research was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program. To establish a domestic multi-center, large-scale "brain-heart comorbidity" dynamic database platform including clinical, sample database, image and other multi-dimensional information requirements, through the construction of a multi-center intelligent scientific research integration platform based on artificial intelligence. Any of newly diagnosed cardiovascular related diseases were identified via ICD-10-CM codes: I21, I22, I24 (Ischaemic heart diseases) [i.e., ACS], I46 (cardiac arrest), I48 (Atrial fibrillation/flutter), I50 (Heart failure), I71 (Aortic disease), I60 (subarachnoid hemorrhage), I61 (intracerebral hemorrhage), I63 (Cerebral infarction), I65 (Occlusion and stenosis of precerebral arteries), I66 (Occlusion and stenosis of cerebral arteries), I67.1 (cerebral aneurysm), I67.5 (moyamoya diseases), Q28.2 (Arteriovenous malformation of cerebral vessels). The data is stored on the brain-heart comorbidity warehouse via a physical server at the institution's data centre or a virtual hosted appliance. The brain-heart comorbidity platform comprises of a series of these appliances connected into a multicenter network. This network can broadcast queries to each appliance. Results are subsequently collected and aggregated. Once the data is sent to the network, it is mapped to a standard and controlled set of clinical terminologies and undergoes a data quality assessment including 'data cleaning' that rejects records which do not meet the brain-heart comorbidity quality standards. The brain-heart comorbidity warehouse performs internal and extensive data quality assessment with every refresh based on conformance, completeness, and plausibility (http://10.100.101.65:30080/login).

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Cerebral Oxygenation and Neurological Functioning After Cardiac Surgery

Coronary Artery DiseaseCognitive Impairment1 more

The overall goal of this research program is to determine quantitative predictors of quantitative long-term neurological functioning following different cardiac surgery procedures. The investigators aim to generate a timeline of neurological function that includes pre-existing performance, post-operative delirium, and neurological outcome. Furthermore, the investigators will test the hypothesis that intraoperative regional cerebral oxygenation (rSO2) desaturations, as measured by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) are associated with poor neurological functioning following cardiac surgery, as measured by a robotic device called the KINARM.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

International T1 Multicenter Outcome Study

Heart FailureCardiomyopathies3 more

Mapping of magnetic relaxation within the myocardial tissue using T1 (and T2) mapping using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) are novel measures of quantifiable (scalable) myocardial tissue characterisation. Evidence suggests that myocardial mapping could be useful in detection of diffuse myocardial disease, complementing late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) as the tool for regional myocardial disease. A handful of studies, three single centre study of a single T1 index with outcomes and one multicentre study for all indices reported strong associations with all cause mortality and heart failure. These studies were based on a single-vendor platform and were using a single sequence. The main unknowns pertaining the successful translation of this technique and the transferability of the methodology beyond a single centre and lack of outcome evidence from broad and large populations. In this study, we will assess the diagnostic accuracy of T1 (and T2) mapping measurements in health and disease, and the prognostic relevance of T1 mapping measurements by associations with outcome. This study is builds upon/integrates the evidence of the NCT02407197 study, which remains active for follow-up, but is currently no longer recruiting.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Identification of Risk Factors for Acute Coronary Events by OCT After STEMI and NSTEMI in Patients...

Myocardial InfarctionAcute Coronary Syndrome1 more

The objective of this study is to compare the clinical outcome of Non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) and ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients with non-obstructive, non-culprit coronary lesions and either presence or absence of vulnerable plaque characteristics as assessed by optical coherence tomography (OCT).

Active11 enrollment criteria
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