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Active clinical trials for "Arrhythmias, Cardiac"

Results 631-640 of 689

Measurement of Left and Right Atria From CT Scans of Cardiac Rhythm Disorder Cases

Atrial Fibrillation

The purpose of this study is to gather information about the size and shape of patients' hearts in order to design a device.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

German Ablation Quality-Register

Arrhythmia

The goal of this register is the documentation of the success as well as of the complications regarding interventional therapy of cardiac arrhythmia by catheter ablation. This is the necessary basis for quality management and development of possible improvements of catheter ablation.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

T-Wave Alternans in Acute Myocardial Infarction: An Evaluation of the Time of Testing on Its Prognostic...

Myocardial InfarctionArrhythmias

T-wave alternans is an electrocardiographic finding that has been shown to predict the occurrence of future cardiac arrhythmias in patients who have had a heart attack. What is unknown about T-wave alternans testing is when is the best time to perform the test. In most studies, T-wave alternans testing is conducted 4 weeks or more after a heart attack. It is unknown if T-wave alternans testing performed prior to hospital discharge in heart attack patients is reliable. The objective of this project is to determine the diagnostic accuracy of T-wave alternans testing performed prior to hospital discharge and again at 30 days after hospital discharge in patients who have suffered a heart attack.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Monitoring Arrhythmia Patients (IMPACT)

Arrhythmias

Prospective, multicenter, non-randomized study to determine the performance of NUVANT Mobile Cardiac Telemetry system in arrhythmia detection.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Study of the Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD) Intracardiac Electrograms

Congestive Heart FailureSudden Cardiac Death2 more

The purpose of this study is to determine whether waveforms of the intracardiac electrograms, acquired through an ICD, can be used: to predict malignant ventricular arrhythmias, requiring appropriate ICD therapies, and to predict progression of heart failure in patients with ICD.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Electrocardiogram (ECG) Recordings in Paediatric Population

Arrhythmia

The primary goal of this protocol is to collect ECG signals from paediatric patients using 4 surface electrodes placed in the configurations proposed for the Cameron Health, Inc. subcutaneous implantable defibrillator (S-ICD) system. These signals will then be used to test the S-ICD system for future use in paediatric patients.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators - Improving Risk Stratification

Sudden Cardiac DeathImplantable Defibrillator User3 more

Worldwide three million people a year die from sudden cardiac death (SCD). In most cases there is no warning and the heart is stopped by a sudden arrhythmia. We know that some people are at high risk of sudden cardiac death and can prevent their deaths with an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) that is implanted in a minor operation. However, most people who die from sudden cardiac death are not found to be at high risk by our current risk markers and 40% of the people who have ICDs do not have therapy within the first 4 years after implant. We need new and better ways of identifying people who are at high risk of sudden cardiac death so that we can prevent their deaths with ICDs. Our understanding of the electrical signals in the heart has increased considerably in recent years; in no small part this is due to our Principal Investigator Professor Andre Ng's basic science work. This study aims to take the understanding of action potential duration (APD) restitution gained through our work and other studies in humans and in computer simulations and translate it into a fresh way of assessing risk of sudden cardiac death. This study will carefully examine electrical activity, using APD restitution, in the hearts of patients who are having ICDs fitted because of their high risk of sudden cardiac death and combine this with a detailed heart scan, assessment of autonomic nervous system and gene expression data. We will then follow these patients up to see who benefits from their ICD. This wide ranging information will give us as complete a picture as possible of the factors that cause sudden cardiac death. We hope to use this to identify better predictors of sudden cardiac death. The study hypotheses are as follows: Primary Regional Restitution Instability Index (R2I2) will be significantly higher in patients reaching the endpoint of ventricular endpoint / sudden cardiac death than in those not. An R2I2 cut-off of 1.03 will partition patients into high and low risk groups. Secondary Peri-infarct zone mass in grams will be significantly higher in patients reaching the endpoint of ventricular endpoint / sudden cardiac death than in those not.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

THE GIRAFFE Study: Genomic Risk Markers for Atrial Fibrillation Following Extended Cardiac Rhythm...

Patients With Symptoms of Cardiac Arrhythmia at Risk for Atrial Fibrillation

Our primary hypothesis is that a risk score comprised of approximately 10 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are associated with atrial fibrillation at the Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS) level is associated with the development of atrial fibrillation among previously undiagnosed patients at high risk for atrial fibrillation. A current example of these SNPs is shown in Table 1. As a secondary hypothesis, we will test the association between atrial fibrillation diagnosed in this study with a subset of SNPs reported to be associated with atrial fibrillation and with fine-mapping SNPs. We will also test the association between atrial fibrillation of less than and greater than 30 seconds and a panel of approximately 10 SNPs.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Arrhythmic Effects of Hight Dose Caffeine

Arrhythmia

Heart failure patients represent a group of individuals at higher risk for cardiac arrhythmias. There is a perception that caffeine consumption may represent an increase in this risk. Although the medical staff and health professionals suggest a reduction in the intake of this substance to patients considered at risk, there is no scientific proof for this recommendation. Some animal studies suggest a possible association between arrhythmias and caffeine use with higher doses, but this finding did not appear in human studies. In particular, little is known about the association between caffeine consumption and arrhythmias in patients with heart failure, especially at higher doses of consumption. More specific and safe guidelines on caffeine consumption are needed.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Multimodal Image Processing Software to Guide Cardiac Ablation Therapy

Ventricular ArrhythmiasPersistent Atrial Fibrillation

MIGAT will develop and transfer software tools to assist ablation therapy of cardiac arrhythmias. The scientific background and objectives of MIGAT differ between atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, because the knowledge on structure-function relationships and the definition of ablation targets are different. Hypothesis: The combination of body surface mapping and imaging will enable a comprehensive non-invasive assessment of cardiac arrhythmia mechanisms and localization, myocardial structural substrate, and cardiac anatomy, all of which should be of value to better define targets for ablation therapy. No software solution is currently available for multimodal data processing, fusion, and integration in 3-dimensional mapping systems to assist ablation. Because such a development requires a trans-disciplinary approach (cardiac electrophysiology, imaging, computer sciences), it is likely to emerge from an academic initiative. Objectives: MIGAT will gather resources from the Liryc Institute (L'Institut de Rythmologie et Modélisation Cardiaque), the Inria (Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique) and the University Hospital of Bordeaux to develop a computer-based solution with high expected impact on the daily management of cardiac electrical disorders. The research program will benefit from the MUSIC (Magnetom Avanto, Siemens, Erlangen, Germany) equipment recently funded as part of the "Investissement d'Avenir" program, and combining state-of-the-art electrophysiology and magnetic resonance imaging technology. MIGAT will involve software engineers, computer science researchers, cardiologists, radiologists and clinical research personnel with the following objectives: Development of a multimodal data processing software to assist cardiac ablation Optimization and Validation of the software in terms of user experience Optimization and Validation of the software in terms of clinical performance Optimization of software quality compatible with subsequent device certification and randomized-controlled evaluation

Completed4 enrollment criteria
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