French Cohort of Myocardial Infarction Evaluation
Acute Myocardial InfarctionOver the last two decades, considerable progress has been made in the management of Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI), both in the acute phase and in monitoring beyond the hospital phase. Nevertheless, the evolution of care practices and their impact on the mid- and long-term prognosis of patients admitted to the intensive care unit for acute myocardial infarction remain relatively little studied exhaustively. The aim of this study is to assess the profile of AMI patients, their management and follow-up in order to evaluate the relationship between these factors and outcomes.
Identification of Risk Factors for Acute Coronary Events by OCT After STEMI and NSTEMI in Patients...
Myocardial InfarctionAcute Coronary Syndrome1 moreThe 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).
KOMATE Registry: Korean Multicenter Angioplasty Team
Coronary Artery DiseaseAcute Coronary Syndrome2 moreThe investigators will enroll the patients who underwent PCI and was based on real world clinical practice to collect the data regarding demographic, clinical, procedural information and clinical outcome using case report forms.
Impact of Peripheral Vascular Stiffness Assessment on Risk Prediction in Patients With Myocardial...
Myocardial InfarctionVascular Stiffness1 moreRisk assessment after myocardial infarction is critical in daily practice and evolution toward heart failure especially diastolic heart failure remains a key issue. All consecutive patients with myocardial infarction (either STEMI or NSTEMI but excluding type 2 MI) presenting at university hospital of Lille within 48 hours after symptom onset will be recruited in the RIGID-MI registry. The RIGID-MI study proposes to deeply evaluate at 1 month after MI: peripheral vascular disease, vascular stiffness, ventriculo-arterial coupling and other usual risk factors. The main objective is to identify clinical, biological and imaging parameters associated with poor prognosis, especially evolution toward diastolic heart failure, recurrence of MI, and bleeding.
Medical-economic Evaluation Comparing Intensive Outpatient Monitoring of Neuro-cardiovascular Diseases...
Cerebrovascular AccidentsMyocardial InfarctionCerebral Vascular Accidents (stroke) and Myocardial Infarction (MI), which share the same risk factors, treatments and pathophysiological mechanisms, have become two major public health problems due to the increase in their prevalence rate and the longer survival after such an event in developed countries. International data, including French data and data from our own registries, illustrate that: risk factors that are common, mainly hypertension, smoking, high cholesterol or diabetes, remain insufficiently controlled, although they are easily detectable and treatable; the incidence rate of stroke has doubled in 20 years in people under 55 years of age, increasing the number of people with chronic disabilities; 1-month and 1-year mortality rates for stroke and MIs have decreased by 17% in 5 years, increasing the number of survivors but with chronic disabilities; the aging of the population and the arrival of the baby boomers of the 1950s in the at-risk age groups has increased the at-risk population; Stroke and MI recurrence rates reached a threshold of 6% / year, in contrast to the very high rates of re-hospitalization at 1 year: 30% post-stroke and 20% post-MI, due to poorly anticipated and controlled complications. These reasons explain the lack of significant progress in preventing recurrences, preventable complications (heart failure and arrhythmias after MI; falls, sphincter and swallowing disorders, dementia and arrhythmias after stroke) and re-admission. This observation is aggravated by problems of medical demography and therefore the availability of neurologists, cardiologists and general practitioners. Local and foreign experiments have demonstrated the value of intensive, coordinated and multi-professional stroke and MI monitoring, including nurses, in terms of: better control of risk factors and reduction of the rate of re-hospitalization by recurrence in stroke follow-up; improvement of the patient's general condition, control of risk factors, reduction in the number of events, decrease in the number of re-hospitalizations and their duration in MI follow-up. The value of pharmacists' additional intervention in intensive post-MI follow-up compared to routine follow-up has also been demonstrated, particularly in terms of significant improvement in patient compliance. The hypothesis is that 2 years of intensive follow-up for both post-stroke or post-MI patients, by trained hospital and liberal nurses, in conjunction with doctors and pharmacists, is of medico-economic interest compared to usual follow-up. Therefore a medico-economic evaluation was designed to evaluate the efficiency of this model, which combines community-based and recourse care, prevention and coordination of care compared to usual follow-up.
TURKish Acute Myocardial Infarction Registry
Acute Myocardial InfarctionThere is no up-to-date information regarding presentation, management and clinical course of patients with acute myocardial infarction (MI) in Turkey. TURKMI registry is designed to provide insight to the characteristics, management from symptom onset to the hospital discharge and outcome of patients with acute MI in Turkey.
FDG an Myocardial Infarction: The PIAF Trial
History of Myocardial InfarctionIn order to define distinct and reliable arterial 18Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) thresholds identifying patients at risk for cardiovascular events, patients with a history of myocardial infarction will be included in this international multicenter trial. Non-enhanced whole-body FDG PET/CT will be performed in all patients and the arterial FDG uptake in the carotid arteries as well as the aorta will be quantified by calculating different uptake parameters. In addition, FDG uptake in hematopoietic tissues (spleen, bone marrow), visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and different brain regions (e. g. amygdala) will be measured. Furthermore, specific blood biomarkers including genetic biomarkers, which are linked to atherosclerotic disease with predictive power for future cardiovascular events, will be analyzed in a subgroup of patients. In part 2 of the trial, a 4-year follow-up period will be analyzed with a focus on the prediction of cardiovascular events (acute coronary syndrome, non-fatal ischemic stroke, ischemic cardiac death, other causes of death, coronary/vascular revascularization, new-onset of angina, symptomatic peripheral arterial disease and heart failure). The predictive value of the arterial, hematopoietic and cerebral FDG uptake parameters as well as of the specific blood and genetic biomarkers will be determined.
Metabolic Phenotyping and Follow-Up of Patients With and Without Diabetes After New Onset of STEMI...
ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI)Diabetes Mellitus2 moreThe aim of the prospective observational DISTEMI-Study in people with and without Diabetes mellitus (DI) after new onset of ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) aged 18-80 years at inclusion into the study is to characterize in detail the clinical, metabolical, immunological and vascular phenotype, investigate the interplay between myocardial remodelling and the metabolic phenotype, monitor the progression of the disease and compare the phenotype of STEMI people with diabetes mellitus to people with prediabetes and glucose tolerant people.
Simultaneous Cardiac Surgery and Micronet-covered Stent Carotid Revascularization in High Perioperative...
Carotid StenosisCoronary Artery Disease3 moreProspective, single-center, clinical registry of patients with symptomatic/critical carotid artery stenosis at risk of stroke coexisting with unstable or multivessel severe coronary artery disease and/or severe valvular heart disease undergoing endovascular treatment of carotid atherosclerosis using a mesh stent in combination with cardiac surgery (coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and/or valve surgery). A study involving clinical data evaluation of truly simultaneous treatment outcomes in patients deemed to require carotid revascularization at the time of surgical cardiac intervention (single-stage, simultaneous treatment). An open-label study, without randomization - a single arm study. Academic Registry - scientific activity of the Faculty of Medicine, Collegium Medicum, Jagiellonian University and John Paul II Hospital.
Management of Anticoagulants and Antithrombotics in Patients With CSDH
Chronic Subdural HematomaAnticoagulant-induced Bleeding2 morePrimary objective of the study will be to compare, up to 6 months after surgery, number of relapses (post operative re-bleeding) or intracerebral hemorrhage (others than subdural hematomas) and thromboembolic or cardiovascular ischemic events, in patients undergoing surgery for chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH). These data will be correlated to the suspension or not of antithrombotics or anticoagulants before surgery or their re-introduction after surgery.