Correlation of Biomarkers With the Presence and Severity of Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe development of coronary artery disease is multifactorial. Peripheral blood biomarkers paly an important role in the prediction of coronary artery disease. However, the identification of those biomarkers and their correlation with the presence and severity of coronary artery disease are unclear. The present study aims to identify the differentially expressed biomarkers from peripheral blood between normal population and patients with different disease burden confirmed by coronary angiography, and to analyze the correlation of those biomarkers with the severity of coronary artery disease. Finally, the prediction of biomarkers for clinical events.
Exercise Adherence of Home-based Cardiac Rehabilitation
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe study explored the influencing factors of exercise adherence of home-based cardiac rehabilitation in patients with coronary artery disease.
New Diabetes Mellitus and Pre-Diabetes With First-time Diagnosed Coronary Artery Disease
PreDiabetesDiabetes1 moreA prospective analytic study to evaluate the incidence, clinical and laboratory characteristics, extent of coronary artery disease and short-term outcome of newly diagnosed diabetes and pre-diabetes in patients with first-time diagnosed coronary artery disease treated in Saud Al Babtain Cardiac Center.
Effect of Non-surgical Periodontal Treatment on Cardiovascular Risk Markers
Coronary Heart DiseasePeriodontitisThe research question was to investigate whether non-surgical periodontal therapy could reduce cardiovascular risk markers in Coronary heart disease (CHD) patients.
International Post-PCI FFR Extended Registry
Coronary DiseasePercutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is a standard treatment strategy for coronary artery disease (CAD). With the presence of myocardial ischemia, PCI reduces the risks of death, myocardial infarction (MI), and revascularization compared to medical therapy. However, the risk of future clinical events remains high, and about 10% of patients experienced further cardiovascular events after PCI. Several factors are associated with these poor outcomes. Well-known patient-related risk factors are diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, left ventricular dysfunction, previous MI, and presentation with acute coronary syndrome. Procedure-related factors, such as stent under expansion, malposition, edge dissection, the number of the used stent, and total stent length, are also related to poor prognosis after PCI. Recent studies reported that fractional flow reserve (FFR) after coronary stenting, or post-PCI FFR, was associated with future clinical outcomes after PCI, and low post-PCI FFR value was associated with procedural factors. However, optimal cut-off values of post-PCI FFR ranged widely, from 0.86 to 0.96, and some studies reported the limited prognostic value of post-PCI FFR. This might result from differences in study populations, the definition of outcomes, type of stent used, and distribution of included vessels among previous studies. Previously, the investigators incorporated previous data into the International Post-PCI FFR registry and demonstrated the prognostic value of post-PCI FFR using the machine learning technique. However, the results were based on the two years follow-up of patients after PCI, and the prognostic value of post-PCI FFR in long-term outcomes is still uncertain. Therefore, the investigators planned to extend the International Post-PCI FFR registry to define the long-term prognostic implication of post-PCI FFR.
Influence of Training Intensity in Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary Artery DiseaseCoronary artery disease (CAD) is associated with high mortality worldwide. Narrowing of the coronary arteries can cause an acute myocardial infarction. Patient with cardiac ischemia are often treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Following hospitalisation, the patients are offered to attend a classical rehabilitation program with moderate exercise intensity. Current exercise program for cardiac rehabilitation has proven to reduce cardiovascular risk factors 1. Is it possible to improve the exercise capacity and risk profile even more if the exercise program includes more vigorous training? The program starts one week after the cardiac incident (AMI, PCI or CABG) and takes 12 weeks to complete. Patients with heart failure and valvular disease are excluded. First ventilatory threshold (VT1) and second ventilatory threshold (VT2) are determined during cycloerometry. VT2 reflects aerobic-anaerobic transition and therefore the aerobic functional capacity2. Exercise load reached at VT2 is used to determine the training load during rehabilitation. The research goal is to investigate the influence of training intensity on the exercise capacity and risk profile of CAD patients.
Invasive Validation of Non-invasive Central Blood Pressure Measurements Using Oscillometric Pulse...
Arterial HypertensionCoronary Heart DiseaseThere is growing evidence that central blood pressure is a better predictor of hypertensive end-organ damage and cardiovascular outcome than routine brachial readings. The investigators aimed to evaluate the accuracy of a novel device for the non-invasive determination of central blood pressure based on automated oscillometric radial pulse wave analysis.
Frank Score and Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary Artery DiseasePatients with coronary artery disease (CAD) were enrolled. CAD was diagnosed by coronary angiography which also resulted Syntax score. Images of left and right ears were captured by a digital camera. Frank score of each patients was calculated based on characteristics and numbers of wrinkles of the earlobes. Statistic analysis were carried out to analyze the correlation between Frank Score and Syntax Score.
Observational Study of Angiographic Coregistered Optical Coherence Tomography in Patients Undergoing...
Coronary Artery DiseaseTo define and evaluate the impact of angiographic coregistered OCT on physicians decision-making through prospective data collection in PCI procedures.
DNA Damage & Repair Proteins In Patients With Atherosclerotic Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary AtherosclerosisThe purpose of this study is: To examine the association between stable and unstable coronary artery disease (CAD) with markers of DNA damage and repair, To examine the association between plaque morphology as assessed by frequency-domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT) and markers of DNA damage and repair in order to identify potential markers of plaque instability, To examine the association between markers of DNA damage and repair and major adverse cardiovascular events defined as death, MI and unplanned percutaneous or surgical revascularization,