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Active clinical trials for "Hypertension"

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Optimal Blood Pressure for the prevenTIon of Major vAscuLar Events in Patients With DIABETES Mellitus...

Diabetes MellitusHigh Blood Pressure2 more

High blood pressure (BP) is a major public health concern, especially in low and middle income countries. High BP is a highly prevalent condition, and it is usually associated with diabetes mellitus. Both high BP and diabetes are risk factors for major cardiovascular events including cardiovascular death, acute myocardial infarction, stroke, unstable angina and heart failure. In addition, high BP is also related to cognitive decline. The OPTIMAL-DIABETES trial consists of a two-arm, multicenter, randomized clinical trial designed to test whether a lower systolic blood pressure (SBP) target will reduce the occurrence of major cardiovascular events in diabetic patients compared to the standard SBP target.

Active38 enrollment criteria

Clinical One-stage Controlled Study of reSistant Arterial Hypertension for the desiGning of a personAlized...

Resistant Arterial Hypertension

This study was planned to assess the concentration of antihypertensive drugs in the blood plasma in patients with controlled and uncontrolled arterial hypertension. Methods: it is planned to include patients with arterial hypertension taking 3 antihypertensive drugs (indapanide, lisinopril or valsartan, amlodipine). Based on the results of 24-hour blood pressure monitoring, the patients will be randomized into two groups: The first group - the patients with controlled AH; The second group - the patients with uncontrolled AH. Venous blood was taken in both groups of the patients in the morning before and 2 hours after taking drugs to assess the concentration of lisinopril, amlodipine, valsartan and indapamide. Concentation of assesed antihypertensive drugs will be compared in both groups.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Hypertension Management in Young Adults Personalised by Echocardiography and Clinical Outcome.

Hypertension

HyperEcho is a multi-centre longitudinal observational study, to investigate whether baseline transthoracic echocardiography along with routine data collected in the hypertension clinic can guide clinicians to better manage, and improve risk stratification for cardiovascular disease in young adults with hypertension. Participants are characterised as young adult patients aged between 18 to 40 years old and referred to the hypertension clinic to manage their blood pressure. The study visit will be carried out during the planned routine visit of the participants to the hypertension clinics of NHS trusts within England. Routine data will be collected by the assigned nurse for the hypertension clinic as part of the clinical service, and research participation will not affect the clinical progress of the participant. The additional research component to the clinic will be asking the participants for their consent to undergo a research echocardiography scan if it has not been a part of their clinical assessment. Participants will also be asked to consent to the use of their data that has been collected in the hypertension clinic, such as; referral letters, medical history, 24-hour blood pressure monitoring report, ECG, blood samples, body fat composition, and dietary questionnaire. In addition to this, participants will be asked to consent to further review of their data and medical notes during their follow up visits (up to 10 years).

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Pulmonary Hypertension SOLAR

Interstitial Lung DiseaseCOPD1 more

The main goal of this study is to develop a noninvasive signature for pulmonary vascular remodeling in Group 3 PH patients, using hyperpolarized 129Xe magnetic resonance imaging (129Xe MRI). Such a signature may identify Group 3 PH responders to PAH-specific therapies. PAH's unique 129Xe MRI signature has been shown in previous studies. Past studies have lacked a pathologic "ground truth" correlate of these signatures, which could be provided by comparing them with the pathology of lung explant tissue from patients who have undergone a lung transplant. This signature could be validated in a cohort of patients with Group 3 PH in future studies.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Home Blood Pressure Telemonitoring LINKED With Community Health Workers to Improve Blood Pressure...

HypertensionHigh Blood Pressure

The LINKED-BP Program is a patient-centered, multi-level intervention linking home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) with a telemonitoring platform (Sphygmo) that links with all Bluetooth-enabled validated blood pressure (BP) devices, support from community health workers (CHWs), and BP measurement training at community health centers serving high-risk adults to prevent stage 2 hypertension (BP ≥ 140/90 mm Hg). The LINKED-BP Program study will recruit a total of 600 adults (30 from each practice) with elevated BP (120-129/<80 mm Hg) or untreated stage 1 hypertension (130-139/80-89 mm Hg) across 20 community health centers or primary care practices serving high-risk adults. This cluster-randomized trial consists of two arms: (1) enhanced "usual care arm," wherein patients will be provided with Omron 10 series home BP monitors (HBPM) and will be managed by the patients' primary care clinicians as usual; and (2) the LINKED-BP Program or "intervention arm," which will include training of patients on HBPM, Sphygmo BP telemonitoring app, and CHW visits for education and counseling on lifestyle modification. The intervention period for each study participant is 12 months.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Prospective Case-Control Study of Cardiovascular Changes in Pregnancy Related Hypertensive Disorders...

Pre-Eclampsia

This is a research study to understand the changes in the heart and the cardiovascular system that may occur in women who develop high blood pressure during pregnancy.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

PREMOM-II: Pregnancy Remote Monitoring of Women With Gestational Hypertensive Disorders

Gestational Hypertension

The goal of this project is thoroughly evaluate the added value of telemonitoring (TM) program for women at risk for gestational hypertensive disorders (GHD), by investigating it impact on prenatal follow-up, health outcomes for mother and child, costs and satisfaction, and by specifically investigating what are the major contributors to this added value. A substudy (CAPROM) will be conducted at the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg (ZOL) in collaboration with the Department of Physiology of Hasselt University in the framework of the Limburg Clinical Research Center (LCRC). CAPROM aims at evaluating the relationship between longitudinal (clinical) blood pressure measurements and changes in (subclinical) cardiovascular (CV) hemodynamics throughout pregnancy, as well as their responses to antihypertensive medication. To this end, CV profiling will be performed longitudinally on pregnant women at risk for developing GHD being included in the TM group of the PREMOM II study (group 1) or being followed-up via TM as part of their usual care (group 2). A separate ICF is signed for inclusion in the CAPROM substudy. The results of the CAPROM study will be performed by a researcher who is not involved in the PREMOM II main study. In addition, results of the CV profiling will not be communicated to the clinical decision makers of PREMOM II.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

A Cardiometabolic Health Program Linked With Clinical-Community Support and Mobile Health Telemonitoring...

HypertensionHigh Blood Pressure2 more

The LINKED- HEARTS Program is a multi-level project that intervenes at the practice level by linking home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) with a telemonitoring platform (Sphygmo). The program incorporates team-based care by including community health workers (CHWs) and pharmacists to improve the outcomes of multiple chronic conditions (reduced blood pressure (BP), lower blood sugar, and improved kidney function). The LINKED-HEARTS Program will recruit a total of 600 adults with uncontrolled hypertension (BP ≥ 140/90 mm Hg) AND either type 2 diabetes or chronic kidney disease (CKD) across 16 community health centers or primary care practices serving high-risk adults. This cluster-randomized trial consists of two arms: (1) enhanced "usual care arm," wherein patients will be provided with Omron 10 series home BP monitors and will be managed by the patients' primary care clinicians as usual; and (2) the "intervention arm" which will integrate HBPM telemonitoring, a CHW intervention and provider-level interventions into the usual clinical care to improve BP control and provide support for self-management of chronic conditions. The study pharmacist will conduct telehealth, use the Sphygmo app and the Pharmacist Patient Care Process to collaborate with other providers to optimize pharmacologic therapy to improve hypertension outcomes and with payors to ensure consistent access to drug therapy.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Fractional Flow Reserve to Determine Atherosclerosis Renal Hypertension Stenting

Renal Artery Stenosis AtheroscleroticSecondary Hypertension Renal Arterial

Although randomized trials have demonstrated there is no benefit of renal-artery stenting in addition to medical therapy for patients with atherosclerosis renal artery stenosis, many patients indeed gained benefit in daily practices after stenting, such as reduction in blood pressure and recovery in renal functions. One important gap is that there is no universal standard to determine whether to stent in these patients. Fraction Flow Reserve (FFR) has been studied for many year in chronic coronary heart disease and FFR-guided revascularization strategy is known to be better than both angiography-guided revascularization and medication alone. The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether Fraction Flow Reserve (FFR) is appropriate to determine stenting in hypertension patients with atherosclerosis renal artery stenosis. The main questions it aims to answer are: Is it appropriate to use FFR to determine whether or not stenting for hypertension patients with atherosclerosis renal artery stenosis? To provide detailed data supporting design of further trial, such as sample size calculating, cut-off value for FFR in renal artery stenosis, etc. Participants met the inclusive/exclusive criteria will be randomized to stenting or not in the renal artery, then hyperemic FFR induced by dopamine will be measured in all participants. If FFR is ≥0.80, randomization will be applied. If FFR is <0.80, randomization will be ignored, and stenting will be performed as planned. The blood pressure and anti-hypertensive medications will be compared before and 3 months after the procedure based on ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, all participants will be followed up for 1 year.

Recruiting18 enrollment criteria

Gastric Bypass With Different Lengths of the Bilipancreatic Limb

Laparoscopic-Roux-en-Y Gastric BypassObesity5 more

Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (LRYGB) has been the most performed bariatric surgical intervention until a few years ago, due to its good results in terms of weight loss and remission of comorbidities such as hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. However, more than 25% of patients do not obtain the expected result. There is no uniform technique to perform a LRYGB, but traditionally it was constructed using a long alimentary limb (AL) and a short biliopancreatic limb (BPL). There is no current consensus on the ideal length of the LRYGB limbs. The distal gastric bypass at the expense of a longer biliopancreatic limb (LBPL-GB) could induce more excess of weight loss (EWL%), but with possible protein malnutrition depending on the length of the remaining common limb. The aim of this study is compare a LBPL-GB (BPL 150cm, AL 70cm) with LAL-GB (BPL 70cm, AL 150cm). PRIMARY OUTCOME: to evaluate if there are differences in weight loss. SECONDARY OUTCOME: to assess whether there are differences in both groups in remission of the most common comorbidities and in quality of life. DESIGN: multicenter, prospective, randomized study in blocks (1:1), blinded for the patient and to the surgeon up to the time of intervention, in patients with indication of RYGB for obesity (BMI>35 with associated comorbidity or BMI>40 with or without comorbidity, excluding those of BMI>50). Intervention: LRYGB type 1 (LAL-GB: 150cm ALand 70cm BPL) or type 2 (LBPL-GB: 70cm AL and 150cm BPL). The expected result is that the patients with LBPL-GB present better EWL%, and higher remission of their comorbidities than the comparison group

Active6 enrollment criteria
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