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Active clinical trials for "Coronary Artery Disease"

Results 3771-3780 of 4926

Fibrin Clot Properties and Blood Loss Following Coronary Artery By-pass Grafting

Coronary Artery DiseaseInternal Mammary-Coronary Artery Anastomosis4 more

Up to 15% of operations in cardio-pulmonary by-pass are complicated by excessive postoperative blood loss, which negatively affects the outcomes. Recently, it has been demonstrated that fibrin clot susceptibility to lysis is a modulator of postoperative blood loss after cardiac surgery for aortic stenosis. Earlier, a preliminary study showed a negative association of postoperative blood loss after coronary artery by-pass grafting (CABG) with fibrin clot lysis time, reflecting susceptibility to fibrinolysis. In CABG, postoperative blood loss may depend on the operative technique with respect to left internal mammary artery (LIMA) harvesting. LIMA is taken down in virtually all CABG procedures, but harvesting technical details remain at surgeons discretion (skeletonization without opening the pleural cavity vs. pedicled graft with pleura wide open). The investigators decided to test the hypothesis that fibrin clot properties modulate the postoperative drainage following CABG strongly enough to attenuate the influence of surgical technique by randomizing the patients undergoing CABG with regard to LIMA harvesting technique.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Systemic, Pancoronary and Local Coronary Vulnerability

Coronary StenosisAcute Coronary Syndrome5 more

• The aim of the VIP study is to investigate the impact of vulnerability markers (inflammatory serum biomarkers for systemic vulnerability, coronary shear stress and vulnerability mapping for pancoronary vulnerability, and imaging-based plaque features for systemic vulnerability) on the rate of major adverse cardiovascular events caused by progression of the non-culprit lesion in patients with acute ST or non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction who undergo revascularization of the culprit lesion during the acute event. Furthermore, the study will evaluate the rate of progression of non-culprit lesions towards a higher degree of vulnerability, based on coronary computed tomography angiographic assessment at 1 year after enrollment.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

PMCF Study for Cardiology Access Procedures

Coronary Artery Disease

This Post-market clinical follow-up (PMCF) study is designed as retrospective, multi-center study to collect real-life data. A multi-center design is used to ensure a representative sample of the physicians who have performed the procedure and to provide a reasonable enrolment period for the required data to be collected. The rationale of this study is to confirm and support the clinical safety and performance of any of these products in a real-word population of 200 patients who underwent an endovascular intervention within standard-of-care (SOC) where at least 1 of the products (named above) from Cordis US Corp were used.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

Coronary Chronic Total Occlusion and Oxidative Balance

Progression of Atherosclerotic PlaqueCoronary Artery Disease

The presence of chronic blockage of coronary arteries, which we may accept as the terminal point of atherosclerotic coronary artery disease, is closely associated with a poor prognosis. The Discovery of markers that may distinguish patients with a high risk of chronic total occlusion development among patients monitored with the diagnosis of stable coronary artery disease may be important for being able to reduce the increased mortality and morbidity rates. Oxidative stress status may be one of the markers that play a role in and/or show the development of chronic total occlusion. It was reported that it has a role in the progression, erosion, and instability of atherosclerotic plaques in coronary arteries. To the best of our knowledge, the relationship between chronic total occlusion development and oxidative stress status in stable coronary artery disease has not been studied. This study investigated the relationships in the oxidative stress status evaluated over TAS, TOS, OSI, Thiol/Disulfide Homeostasis, and antioxidative vitamin levels and possible differences in patients with noncritical coronary artery disease and those with chronic total occlusion.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

In-hospital Versus After-discharge Complete Revascularization

STEMI - ST Elevation Myocardial InfarctionMultivessel Coronary Artery Disease

Patients with STEMI and multivessel disease in whom the culprit lesion has been successfully revascularized during prmimary PCI, will be randomized to in-hospital or after-discharge complete revascularization. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of these two different strategies in terms of hospital stay.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Protocol in Reeducation Occupational Therapist in Coronary Patients

Myocardial InfarctionCoronary Artery Disease

The quality of life, linked to physical, social and mental performance in people with coronary heart disease represents the primary goals in terms of rehabilitation. This is often developed to meet the expected performance standard in order to give the person effective autonomy. However, is the occupational balance always evaluated? and this management adapted? Does occupational therapist, expert in autonomy and independence in multiple illnesses and disabilities, has a major role to play in cardiac rehabilitation? This area of expertise and the application of occupational therapy to coronary patients seems appropriate, if not necessary. However, there are few scientific studies on the need to include occupational therapy within cardiac rehabilitation protocols.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Implication of Coronary Artery Disease Burden and Pattern in Ischemia-causing Vessels With PCI

Coronary Artery DiseaseMyocardial Ischemia2 more

Ischemia-guided revascularization is the cornerstone of contemporary management of coronary artery disease (CAD). Coronary physiological assessment is advocated in the catheter laboratory to guide percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and it is widely accepted that an FFR ≤ 0.80 is a good indicator for vessels to benefit from revascularization. Nevertheless, a significant proportion of PCI patients continue to experience adverse events related to both stented segment and/or residual or diffuse disease. Our group recently demonstrated the feasibility of pullback pressure gradient (PPG) derived from virtual Quantitative Flow Ratio (QFR) pullback curve, which is an index of atherosclerosis functional pattern and can be used to epitomize the pathophysiological pattern of CAD as focal or diffuse. In this regard, the current study will investigate the incremental value of PPG added to QFR haemodynamic assessment in ischemia-causing vessels received PCI in predicting adverse outcomes.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

18F-FMPP PET MPI in the Detection of Coronary Artery Disease

Coronary Disease

18F-FMPP is a novel PET myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) tracer which targets to mitochondria complex I (MC-I). Preclinical animal studies have shown that its uptake is highly uniform and long in the heart and rather low in the liver. It may be a promising tracer for myocardial perfusion imaging. In addition, as a myocardial PET tracer, it is capable of quantifying absolute myocardial blood flow. Thus this prospective and open-label study is going to evaluate the diagnosis performance of 18F-FMPP PET MPI in suspected or known CAD patients who will be referred for invasive coronary angiography (ICA).

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Risk Factors and Prognosis of Adverse Cardiovascular and Kidney Events After Coronary Intervention...

Cardio-Renal SyndromeCoronary Angiography3 more

As a multi-center, retrospective observation study in southern China, this study included the main study population of patients who underwent coronary angiography at 5 hospitals from Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Yangjiang, Maoming and Longyan from January 2000 to Decemeber 2020. The hospitalization information was collected in the form of direct derivation of the case, and cardiac and renal adverse events were collected through outpatient system. Data on all-cause death were obtained from the Guangdong Provincial Public Security and matched to the electronic Clinical Management System of the Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital records.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Risk Factors for Predictors of MACEs After RA-CABG

Coronary Artery Disease

As the secondary choice of artery grafts, radial artery is more and more used to achieve multiple arterial revascularization in CABG. Risk factors for predictors of major cardiovascular adverse events (MACE) after CABG using radial-artery grafts (RA-CABG), however, remain uncertain. This case-control study aims to identify the baseline predictors of MACE after RA-CABG. We will collect the baseline characteristics and perioperative data of patients underwent RA-CABG from Jan. 2009 to Dec. 2019 in our single center. By reviewing the latest follow-up records, we will examine the correlation between the baseline characteristics and clinical outcomes (MACEs), then identify the independent risk factors for predictors of MACEs after RA-CABG.

Completed4 enrollment criteria
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