Paravertebral Nerve Blocks in Neonates
Congenital Heart DiseaseThis study is a prospective, randomized, non-blinded clinical trial examining the use of paravertebral peripheral nerve block in the neonatal and infant populations. The primary aim of this study is to determine the feasibility of studying whether a single-shot paravertebral nerve block is effective in providing intraoperative and postoperative pain control in infants undergoing a thoracotomy for coarctation of the aorta. This will be determined by comparing consumption of narcotics, expressed as morphine equivalents, in the standard of care and intervention groups.
Improving Patient and Family Health Using Family-Centered Outcomes and Shared Decision-Making
Patient Decision AidsCongenital Heart Disease1 moreThis study is a randomized clinical trial where participants (parents of a fetus or neonate diagnosed with a life-threatening congenital heart disease (CHD)) will randomly be assigned to either receiving a web-based decision aid (DA) alone, or receiving the decision aid that includes a values clarification exercise. Because of the novel use of decision aids in CHD in an acute setting, we will also compare participants receiving the DA in a randomized control trial to a prospective observational population of families faced with similar decisions without a DA (control group). We have designated the Brief Symptom Inventory Global Severity Index of Global Distress 3 months post-birth or death/termination as our primary outcome measure.
Personalized Mobile App for Parents of Infants With Cardiac Disease
Congenital Heart Disease in ChildrenStress1 moreThis project implements an eHealth intervention targeted at vulnerable infants with cardiac disease and specifically study how this intervention impact their parents coping, stress levels and personal wellbeing. The intervention will be evaluated through a randomized controlled trial (RCT). The aim of this project is therefore to measure if the features of this mobile application are useful for parents' assessment of deterioration, decision-making and communication with health care providers.
An IT Approach to Implementing Depression Treatment in Cardiac Patients (iHeart DepCare)
Depressive SymptomsCoronary Heart DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to examine the effect of a brief electronic shared decision making (eSDM) intervention on depressive symptoms in coronary heart disease patients with elevated depressive symptoms.
SVC Occlusion in Subjects With Acute Decompensated Heart Failure
Acute Decompensated Heart FailureAcute Heart Failure2 moreSafety and performance evaluation of the preCARDIA System for patients with ADHF.
NYUCI-ES: Psychosocial Intervention to Improve Health Outcomes for Chinese and Korean ADRD Caregivers...
Dementia CaregiversDiabetes2 moreThis study will conduct a two-arm randomized controlled trial to test the efficacy of a culturally tailored version of the NYU Caregiver Intervention (NYUCI) plus enhanced support (ES) through online chat groups (the NYUCI plus WeChat/Kakaotalk [population social media app for Chinese/Korean] peer support which we call the NYUCI-ES in reducing health risks for cardiometabolic disease among older Chinese and Korean American adults caring for relatives with ADRD. In collaboration with community organizations across the New York and northern New Jersey metropolitan area, we will enroll 300 caregivers of people with ADRD (150 Chinese and 150 Korean) in this study. Aim 1: Develop culturally adapted informational and educational materials about dementia and caregiving issues for social service providers of the intervention and for family caregivers. Aim 2: Test the hypothesis, H1: A counseling and support intervention (the NYUCI-ES) will significantly improve psychosocial factors such as depression, stress self-rated health and chronic disease management among Chinese and Korean-American ADRD caregivers and these changes will be mediated by improvement in social support. H1a: By the first (6- month) follow-up, the mediators (increases in social support, stress reaction) will improve significantly in the intervention group compared to baseline values and the control group. H1b: These improvements will be maintained, and lead to reduction in depressive symptoms, and improvement in self-reported health and chronic disease self-management by the 12-month follow-up compared to the control group. Aim 3: Test the hypothesis, H2: the NYUCI-ES will reduce biologic risk factors, including metabolic health (glycosylated hemoglobin) and inflammation (Oxidative stress, lipid metabolism, etc.) within 6 months of enrollment compared to baseline and a control group; these changes will be mediated through increases in social support and decreases in depressive symptoms and will be maintained at the 12-month follow-up. The public health significance of these findings will likely have an impact on health care policy for CGs from diverse underserved ethnic and cultural backgrounds, potentially reducing morbidity, and improving their quality of life.
Evaluation and Validation of Management Strategy for Conductive Disorders After TAVR (EVATAVI)
Valvular Heart DiseaseConsidering decrease of major complications and improvement of procedural results, conductive disorders currently remain the main issue after TAVR (Transcatheter aortic valve replacement). While pacemaker implantation rate was about 10-15%, new onset LBBB (Left bundle branch block) was observed in 30 % of patients after TAVR but resolved at discharge in the majority of them, with less than 20% progressed to complete AV (atrioventricular) block requiring permanent pacing at hospital discharge. Higher implantation and improvement of the devices were associated with decline of pace maker implantation rate over the years in experienced teams. While guidelines do not give definite recommendation regarding conductive disorder management and pacemaker indication, a strategy of selective telemetry monitoring (TM) after TAVR according to the risk of conductive disorders may be proposed to limit indication and lenght of stay of intensive care unit admission (ICU), allowing direct admission of lower risk patients in general cardiology ward (GCW) without TM, to decrease the duration of TM when a conductive disorder is stable or regressive and finally to decrease the rate of pacemakers implantation. Potential benefit may also include limitation of ICU overload in high volume TAVR centers, investigators can also expect shorter hospitalization duration, with potential economic impact, in line with the development of algorithms for fast track procedures. Therefore the main objective of our prospective study was to evaluate feasibility and safety of a strategy of management of conductive disorders after TAVR based on an algorithm of diagnosis, monitoring and therapeutic strategies based on ECG analysis.
HEARTPrep: A Virtually-delivered Psychosocial Intervention for Mothers Expecting a Baby With Congenital...
Congenital Heart DiseaseCongenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common birth defect and is increasingly diagnosed prenatally. Mothers describe their prenatal experiences as highly stressful and traumatic after a diagnosis of CHD. Maternal stress during pregnancy exerts a powerful influence on birth outcomes and developmental trajectories, particularly for children in underserved populations. In partnership with diverse parent and clinician stakeholders, our team designed HEARTPrep, an innovative, virtually-delivered psychosocial intervention for mothers expecting a baby with CHD. This project will pilot HEARTPrep with mothers expecting a baby with CHD to obtain preliminary data for a larger future trial. This intervention has the potential to improve emotional wellbeing in mothers expecting a baby with CHD, thereby altering developmental trajectories for this large population of children.
A Culturally-Based Palliative Care Tele-consult Program for Rural Southern Elders
CancerCardiac Disease6 moreRural patients with life-limiting illness are at very high risk of not receiving appropriate care due to a lack of health professionals, long distances to treatment centers, and limited palliative care (PC) clinical expertise. Secondly, although culture strongly influences people's response to diagnosis, illness and treatment preferences, culturally-based care models are not currently available for most seriously-ill rural patients and their family caregivers. Lack of sensitivity to cultural differences may compromise PC for minority patients. The purpose of this study is to compare a culturally-based Tele-consult program to usual hospital care to determine whether a culturally-based PC Tele-consult program leads to lower symptom burden in hospitalized African American and White older adults with a life-limiting illness.
Continuous vs Intermittent Ketorolac for Pain Control in Peds CV Surgery
Congenital Heart Disease in ChildrenThe proposed study will be a prospective, randomized, double blind, placebo controlled trial to compare the use of a continuous infusion versus intermittent ketorolac on postoperative patients in the pediatric cardiovascular ICU. We intend to determine if the continuous infusion leads to a decreased utilization of opiates when compared to intermittent ketorolac.