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Active clinical trials for "Coronary Stenosis"

Results 31-40 of 273

Comparison of Optical Coherence Tomography-derived Minimal Lumen Area, Invasive Fractional Flow...

Coronary Stenosis

Significant left main (LM) stenosis is associated with a poor prognosis, therefore, adequate judgement of the prognostic significance of LM stenosis is essential to improve patients' prognosis. Recently, fractional flow reserve (FFR) has become widespread practice and carries a Class Ia recommendation to assess functional significance of intermediate coronary stenosis in patients with stable angina. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)-derived minimum lumen area (MLA) represents an accurate measure to determine LM significance as shown in multiple studies, while optical coherence tomography (OCT) ,which is a novel intracoronary imaging method with a greater spatial resolution (15μm vs. 100μm), faster image acquisition and facilitated image interpretation, OCT derived-MLA has never been validated against FFR and accordingly, it is not mentioned in the current guidelines for myocardial revascularization. Coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) has emerged as a noninvasive alternative of coronary angiography with its excellent negative predictive value, while the positive predictive value of CTA is limited. Computational fluid dynamics is an emerging method that enables prediction of blood flow in coronary arteries and calculation of FFR from computed tomography (FFRCT) noninvasively. Noninvasive and accurate assessment of functional significance would bring a great benefit for patients with LM stenosis, however, there are no data to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of FFRCT for LM stenosis in comparison with FFR and minimal lumen area derived by OCT. This study will investigate the optimal OCT-derived MLA cut-off point and the diagnostic performance of FFRCT for intermediate LM stenosis compared with FFR ≤0.8 as a reference standard.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

Optimal Predilatation Treatment Before Implantation of a Magmaris Bioresorbable Scaffold in Coronary...

Coronary Artery DiseaseStable Angina8 more

The aim of the study is to investigate if lesion preparation with a ScoreFlex balloon compared to a standard non-compliant balloon improve vascular healing and minimize lumen reduction after implantation of a Magmaris bioresorbable scaffold.

Active10 enrollment criteria

Clinical Trial of T-wave™ Coronary Lithotripsy Catheter System

Moderate to Severe Calcified Coronary Artery Stenosis

A prospective, multi-center, single-group target value method was used in this study. According to the inclusion criteria stipulated in this trial protocol, > 3 medical device clinical trial institutions with the record of the State Food and Drug Administration were selected as clinical centers, and 190 cases were selected (the first case of each center was taken as the imported case. Follow-up was carried out according to the program process, but the results were analyzed separately. Moderate-to-severe calcified stenosis patients who met all the inclusion criteria and did not meet any exclusion criteria were enrolled into the study. Lumen pretreatment was performed using the coronary shock catheter system and drug-eluting stents were implanted. Subjects were followed up immediately after surgery, before discharge, 30±3 days after surgery, and 6 months ±14 days after surgery to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of coronary lithotripsy catheter system for preconditioning patients with moderate and severe coronary artery calcification stenosis. In this study, the success rate of postoperative surgery was used as the primary endpoint, and major cardiovascular and cerebrovascular adverse events within 30 days after surgery were used as the secondary endpoint. After the completion of the primary endpoint evaluation of the project, it shall be submitted together with other data to the competent department of medical device approval for initial registration. At the same time, continue to complete the follow-up of the subjects.

Not yet recruiting42 enrollment criteria

Physiological Assessment of Severe Coronary Stenosis for Informing Planned PCI

Coronary Artery Disease

Traditionally, the severity of a blockage (stenosis) in a coronary artery has been determined by visual angiographic assessment of the diameter of the artery at the level of a blockage compared to a normal healthy area of the same artery. With the advent of invasive physiological testing to assess coronary blood flow, multiple clinical trials have demonstrated a clinical benefit to a physiology-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) approach. However, despite this and the potential for significant variation in the interpretation of coronary artery stenosis severity by visual angiography alone to guide PCI, invasive physiologic indices remain significantly under-utilized. The purpose of this study is to investigate the physiologic significance of coronary lesions deemed angiographically severe by visual estimation that are planned for PCI. The investigators plan to perform blinded physiologic assessment pre and post PCI. The primary aim of the study is to determine whether a subset of lesions visually estimated as severe by angiography treated with stent placement/PCI may in fact not be physiologically significant when assessed invasively, and thus PCI could safely be deferred in these patients. A secondary aim is to evaluate physiologic assessment post PCI to detect residual ischemia that could be utilized to optimize stent placement.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Diastolic Hyperemia Free Index for Assessment of Moderate Coronary Stenoses

Coronary Artery Disease

A total of 106 subjects will be enrolled at up to 3 sites. Initial enrollment will occur at Washington University only. After 15 subjects have been enrolled at the primary site and no serious adverse events or protocol events have occurred the additional sites will be trained and added to enrollment.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Impact of Mitral Regurgitation on Coronary Haemodynamics and Instantaneous Effect of Transcatheter...

Mitral Valve InsufficiencyCoronary Stenosis2 more

In the present study, the investigators aim to use the in-vivo Transcatheter Mitral Valve Repair (TMVR) model to determine how Mitral Regurgitation (MR) affects coronary hemodynamics in patients affected with severe MR and concomittant angiographically-documented coronary artery disease. The investigators will also provide unique physiologic data on the acute effect of TMVR using the MitraClip system on coronary microcirculation in patients with severe MR.

Active16 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Effectiveness and Safety of Rotational Atherectomy in Routine Clinical Practice

AtherosclerosisCoronary1 more

This study evaluates the effectiveness and safety rotational atherectomy in routine clinical practice.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

IonMAN II Trial- Early Feasibility Study of the IoNIR Ridaforolimus-Eluting Coronary Stent System...

Coronary StenosisCoronary Artery Disease

This is a prospective, multi-center, single-arm, open-label, early feasibility study to provide preliminary evidence for the safety and efficacy of the novel IoNIR stent system

Not yet recruiting28 enrollment criteria

Drug-Coated Balloon vs. Drug-Eluting Stent for Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Large Coronary...

Coronary Artery DiseaseMyocardial Ischemia3 more

Prospective, randomised, open-label, international multicenter trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of drug-coated balloon (DCB) treatment compared to drug-eluting stenting (DES) in patients with large coronary artery disease.

Not yet recruiting33 enrollment criteria

Breathing-Maneuver-Induced Myocardial Oxygenation Reserve Validated by FFR (B-MORE)

Coronary Artery Stenosis

The study aims to determine a diagnostic marker for regionally impaired myocardial oxygenation response in patients with suspected coronary artery stenosis.

Recruiting16 enrollment criteria
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