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Active clinical trials for "Heart Failure"

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Physical Impairments in Heart Failure Patients With Pacemakers

Heart Failure Patients

Despite major breakthroughs that have recently been made in pacemakers implanted in heart failure (HF) patients, it is clear that functional impairments and symptoms often remain. However, only limited studies have investigated exercise capacity, muscle strength, pulmonary function, dyspnea, and fatigue in pacemaker implanted HF patients. Therefore, investigators aimed to compare the aforementioned outcomes in patients and healthy controls.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

COMPARİSON OF HEART FAİLURE PATİENTS AND HEALTHY PEOPLE İN BALANCE AND GAİT PARAMETERS

Heart Failure,Balance

We aimed to show the difference between balance and gait parameters in heart failure and healthy individuals.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Sleep Disordered Breathing in Acute Congestive Heart Failure

Obstructive Sleep ApneaHeart Failure; With Decompensation

The goal of this study is to determine if sleep disordered breathing results in a measurable degree of overnight myocardial stress/injury in patients with acutely decompensated congestive heart failure. A secondary goal is to determine of a period of medical management attenuates this sleep disordered breathing-induced cardiac injury in this patient population.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

PRoMOTE Follow-up Observational Study

Heart Failure

The purpose of the study is: To evaluate the Heart Failure Risk Status (HFRS) feature performance. To establish the feasibility of remote follow-up in which patient risk triaging is performed by nurse-led review of HFRS feature as supplemental information.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Measuring Fear of Physical Activity in Patients With Heart Failure

Chronic Heart FailureFear of Physical Activity

The study's aims are twofold: First, to examine physiological correlates of fear of physical activity (PA) and second, to examine correlates between fear of PA and interoceptive abilities in patients with chronic heart failure and healthy persons. Patients' fear of PA will be assessed via the "Fear of Activity in Situations - Heart Failure" (FActS-HF) questionnaire. The patient group will be split into two subgroups: One with high fear of PA and the second with low fear of PA based on FActS-HF scores. Fear of PA will be assessed via an adapted version of FActS-HF in a sample of healthy persons (control group). Each member of the high-fear-of-PA group will be individually age- and sex-matched with one member of the low-fear-of-PA group and control group. The participants of all three groups undergo the same experimental trials. Aim 1: The "startle paradigm" will be used to investigate the physiological component of fear of PA. The startle paradigm is based on empirical observations that the startle reflex is larger after the priming with unpleasant stimuli and inhibited after the priming with pleasant stimuli. The participants will be primed with various words including those words associated with physical activity that are expected to be unpleasant in patients with high fear of PA. The startle reflex will be triggered by air puffs on the eyes (startle probes) and measured via facial electromyography (EMG). We assume that startle responses primed with PA related words are stronger in patients with high fear of PA compared to the other groups. Aim 2: Interoceptive accuracy will be assessed via the "Schandry test" and interoceptive awareness will be assessed via the "Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness" (MAIA) questionnaire. During the Schandry test the participants will be instructed to subjectively count their heart rate without any aid or tools. The heart rate will be objectively measured at the same time via ECG. A high congruence of the objective and subjective results indicates a high interoception ability, and is assumed to be correlated with fear of physical activity. Additionally, we expect the MAIA and FActS scores to be correlated.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Medical Care Versus Ventricular Assist Device for the Management of End-stage Heart Failure (MEVADE)...

Heart FailureHeart Transplantation1 more

End-stage heart failure (ESHF) represents a major burden in terms of quality of life, mortality and costs. The current practice in France is to treat patients with ESHF by a combination of drugs and lifestyle interventions before proposing heart transplant (HT) if there is no contraindication. In the Heart and Diabetes Center of Bad Oyenhausen (BO) in Germany, patients presenting with ESHF are preferentially managed by ventricular assist device (VAD) therapy. The primary purpose of this study was to compare the outcomes of these two strategies in the management of ESHF and associated consumption of resources.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

Novel Strategies to Improve Cardiometabolic Status and Adherence to Exercise Regimens in Patients...

Diabetes MellitusType 24 more

This is a 2x2 study examining the impacts of a novel exercise regimen and daily text message reminders in patients at high risk for cardiovascular disease. Patients participating in cardiac rehabilitation will be randomized to either moderate intensity continuous training (MICT) or a novel exercise regimen consisting of three periods of high intensity exercise, called BURST exercise. Additionally, half of the patients in each exercise group will be randomized to receive daily text message reminders to improve adherence to the prescribed exercise regimen.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Lung Ultrasound in Acute Heart Failure

Acute Heart Failure

Acute heart failure is a life threatening condition requiring rapid diagnosis and treatment. However, the differentiation between heart failure and other conditions presenting with acute dyspnea is notoriously difficult in the emergency room. Point-of-care lung ultrasound is a simple, rapid and noninvasive technique directly visualizing fluid content in the lung as evidence for acute heart failure. A number of publications showed the diagnostic utility of lung ultrasound in the diagnosis of heart failure, but many open questions remain. The goal of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of lung ultrasound to predict a cardiac origin of dyspnea in unselected patients in the emergency room as compared to standard evaluation. Further goals are to evaluate if lung ultrasound provides additional diagnostic information as compared to clinical examination, NT-proBNP and chest X-ray, to compare the diagnostic accuracy of lung ultrasound in different patient subgroups (heart failure with preserved vs reduced ejection fraction, de novo vs decompensated chronic heart failure, age ≥75 vs <75 years, women vs men and presence vs absence of concomitant pulmonary disease) and to compare demographics and clinical characteristics in different patient populations. 300 patients, aged ≥18 years presenting to the emergency room (ER) with acute dyspnoe as principal complaint will undergo initial clinical assessment of the likely etiology of dyspnea by the ER physician in charge. The second assessment by the same physician will include results of NT-proBNP according to predefined cutoffs. Final diagnosis ("Gold Standard") will be done by two experienced investigators after patient discharge taking into account the complete medical record except the results of lung ultrasound. Assessment of chest X-ray and lung ultrasound by investigators will be preforemd blinded regarding all other results.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

South Of France Cardiac Assist Registry

Chronic or Acute Advanced Heart Failure

Chronic heart failure is a common disease. It is also a serious disease with a mortality of 50% at 5 years, representing a significant cost in terms of public health expenditure. Heart transplantation represents the "gold standard" of care for terminal heart failure patients reached the end of the disease despite optimal medical and surgical management of their disease, with a survival rate of transplant patients by 90% at 1 year and 82% at 3 years. Long term LVAD are an innovative technology available for more than a decade, developed in part because of the shortage of cardiac grafts and high mortality among patients waiting for transplants due to an important pending. This technique is used substantially only for ten to fifteen years in the world. Survival after implantation of latest devices reaches 80% at 1 year. In France, this technique is intended for patients with terminal heart failure who ended different pharmacological and invasive therapeutic resources available. Currently, academic centers that offer the possibility of long-term LVAD support are organized unicentric in order to centralize specialized care for these patients. Indeed, patients candidates for the establishment of a long-term LVAD are rigorously selected to ensure an acceptable survival. However, practices vary considerably from one center to another in particular regarding: Implantation indications, Pre-implantation patient assessment, Monitoring, Implementation of pharmacological treatments, particularly anticoagulants or betablockers.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Development and Validation of a Self-administered QUestionnaire to Identify Levers of Adhesion Behavior...

Patient Education as TopicSurveys and Questionnaires6 more

Medication non-adherence is an economic problem and a major public health challenge. Factors influencing medication adherence can be modelled according to five dimensions: disease, medication, patient and its close relatives, demographic and socioeconomic factors and health care system. A tool is needed to qualify medication adherence in order to adapt tailored support for individual patients to promote and optimize adherence to therapy. The objective of this work is to present the preliminary results of QUILAM project which is divided into 3 phases: 1. Development of a tool to assess barriers to medication adherence in chronic patient (COPD, Heart failure, Type 2 diabetes) ; 2. Validation of the instrument (especially against clinical criteria) ; 3. Evaluation of the sensitivity of the tool during educational interventions.

Completed5 enrollment criteria
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