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Active clinical trials for "Aortic Coarctation"

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Carotid Atherosclerosis in Patients With Aortic Coarctation

AtherosclerosisAortic Coarctation

Despite aortic coarctation (CoA) repair these patients have cardiovascular complications and coronary artery disease is the most common cause of death.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Cardiac Remodeling and Circulating Biomarkers in Pediatric Left Ventricular Pressure Loading Lesions...

Coarctation of AortaAortic Stenosis1 more

This study is designed to learn more about children who have blockage of the left side of their heart. The goal is to determine how much the heart muscle has thickened before surgery and how it changes in the months after surgery. Investigators are also looking for blood tests that may help them predict which patients will have the most thickening pre-operatively and the best return towards normal after surgery. The findings of this study will help the investigators develop new tests to monitor affected patients and develop new therapies to help minimize heart thickening.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Spanish Percutaneous Aortic INtervention REGISTRY (SPAIN REGISTRY)

Aorta AneurysmAorta Dissection5 more

Multicentre prospective registry including consecutive patients undergoing Percutaneous Endovascular Aneurysm Repair (PEVAR), Percutaneous Endovascular Thoracic Aneurysm Repair (PTEVAR) or Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI) in which variables related to the percutaneous access closure for implanting devices at aorta level will be collected and analyzed. The follow-up period will be 30 days after the procedure. The duration of the recruitment period will be one year. All data will be collected telematically and incorporated into a database for subsequent statistical analysis. There will be 2 points for data interim analysis at 6 and 12 months after initiation of the study.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Proof of Concept of Model Based Cardiovascular Prediction

Cardiovascular ModelingAortic Coarctation2 more

CARDIOPROOF is a proof-of-concept project that consolidates the outcomes of previous virtual physiological human (VPH) projects and checks the applicability and effectiveness of available predictive modelling and simulation tools, validating them in interrelated clinical trials conducted in three European centres of excellence in cardiac treatment (from Germany, Italy and the UK). CARDIOPROOF focuses on patients with aortic valve disease and aortic coarctation, which, if left untreated, can ensue irreversible heart failure. As a result treatment becomes mandatory, but optimum timing and the best type of treatment still remain difficult to determine. With more than 50.000 interventions per year within the EU, the diseases addressed by CARDIOPROOF have a significant socio-economic impact. Present clinical guidelines are highly complex and rely mostly on imaging diagnostics and clinical parameters, without benefiting, as yet, from patient-specific disease modelling based prediction. CARDIOPROOF goes beyond the current state of the art by conducting validation trials aimed at covering and comparing the complete spectrum of cardiovascular treatment, predicting the evolution of the disease and the immediate and mid-term outcome of treatment. Operational clustering is going to provide a seamless clinical solution that applies different modeling methods to realize the potential of personalised medicine taking into account user-friendliness as a key component of clinical usability. CARDIOPROOF's goal is to provide first-hand data on comparative cost-effectiveness and clinical efficacy of the most advanced VPH approaches compared to conventional diagnostics and treatment algorithms, thus accelerating the deployment of VPH methods in clinical environments, and bring to maturity holistic patient-specific computer-based predictive models and simulations.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

Long-term Outcomes and Vascular Evaluation After Coarctation of the Aorta Treatment

Aortic CoarctationArterial Stiffness3 more

Background: Coarctation of the aorta (CoA) can be treated using surgery, balloon angioplasty or stent implantation. Although short-term results are excellent with all three treatment modalities, long term cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality remain high, likely due to persistently abnormal vascular function. The effects of treatment modality on long term vascular function remain uncharacterized. The goal of this study is to assess vascular function in this patient population for comparison among the treatment modalities. Methods: Vascular function in large and small arteries will be prospectively assessed fusing multiple non-invasive modalities, and the results will be compared among the three groups of CoA patients previously treated using surgery, balloon angioplasty or stent implantation after frequency matching for confounding variables. A comprehensive vascular function assessment protocol was created to be used in 7 centers. The primary outcome is arterial stiffness measured by arterial tonometry. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were carefully established after consideration of several potential confounders. Sample size was calculated for the primary outcome variable. Conclusions: Treatment modalities for CoA may have distinct impact on large and small arterial vascular function. The results of this study will help identify the treatment modality that is associated with the most optimal level of vascular function, which, in the long term may reduce CV risk.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

NIRS in Congenital Heart Defects - Correlation With Echocardiography

Congenital Heart DefectSingle-ventricle9 more

Neonatal patients with congenital heart defects (CHD) have changing physiology in the context of transitional period. Patients with CHD are at risk of low perfusion status or abnormal pulmonary blood flow. Near infrared spectroscopy has been used in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) to measure end-organ perfusion. The investigator plan on monitoring newborns with CHD admitted to the NICU with NIRS and echocardiography during the first week of life and correlate measures of perfusion from Dopplers to cerebral and renal NIRS.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Haemodynamics and Function of the Atria in Congenital Heart Disease by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance...

Coarctation of the AortaTetralogy of Fallot1 more

The purpose of this study is to determine whether patients with repaired congenital heart disease show differences in size or function of their heart atria compared to normal controls and depending on the nature of their heart disease.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria
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