search

Active clinical trials for "Embolism"

Results 681-690 of 734

Radial Artery Occlusion After Endovascular Procedure

Embolism and Thrombosis of the Radial Artery

Observational cohort registry: prospective, multicenter independent evaluation of patients who undergo coronary angiography and/or PCI via radial artery. The purpose of this registry is to set the incidence of RAO according to ACT values, considered both as continuous and ordinal variable and its determinants. Coronary angiography and PCI will be performed according to usual practice.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Retrospective Study of Acute Chest Pain in Extremely Critical Condition for More Than Ten Years...

Acute Myocardial InfarctionPulmonary Embolism1 more

Acute non-traumatic chest pain is a common kind of symptom in extremely critical condition, with various pathogenesis and different level of risk . Chest pain in high risk takes 1/3 of that. It mainly includes acute coronary syndrome (including myocardial infarction and unstable angina pectoris, accounted for over 95% of chest pain in high risk), aortic dissection, pulmonary embolism etc, and is in high lethality and deformity. The investigators do the research : To study the diagnosis and management condition of acute chest pain in extremely critical condition for last ten or more years in Qilu Hospital,Shandong University. To discuss the significance of key accompanying symptoms(for example radiating pain, chest distress, sweating, nausea etc), physical signs and lab examination in early diagnosis and risk stratification of acute chest pain in extremely critical condition. To study the effect factors of thrombus burden in STEMI patients, at the same time, creat a a simple, practical and scientific method of blood clots classification.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Feasibility and Safety of Total Percutaneous Closure of Femoral Arterial Access Sites in the Veno-arterial...

Cardiogenic ShockExtracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation6 more

The most frequent access site for veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) is the common femoral artery (CFA), using either an open or percutaneous technique. Currently, percutaneous closure devices for femoral arterial access sites are approved for use only when a 10-F or smaller sheath has been used. However, the availability of the Perclose ProGlide (Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, IL) device has now made it possible to perform percutaneous vessel closure after using larger sheaths.The preclose technique using Perclose ProGlide, has been widely used in endovascular procedures. In a prospective randomized study, complication rates at the access site were similar in patients who underwent total percutaneous access (including percutaneous arteriotomy closure) than in those who underwent surgical cutdown and subsequent surgical closure. Total percutaneous closure of femoral arterial access sites increases patient comfort and decreases the rate of wound infections and lymphatic fistulas.[6,7] Furthermore, patients are mobilized and discharged earlier following the use of closure devices than with compression alone. Despite the above observations, no data have been published regarding percutaneous closure of femoral artery access sites in patients who have undergone VA-ECMO. In this study, we evaluated the safety and feasibility of a percutaneous closure technique using Perclose ProGlide to close the CFA access site after VA-ECMO.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Factor XIII and Pulmonary Embolism in Neurosurgical Patients

Brain TumorVascular Lesion2 more

Two studies (Gerlach et al. 2000; Gerlach et al. 2002) described the impact of factor XIII on the risk of prospective hemorrhage for patients undergoing craniotomy. Since then, factor XIII is measured and substituted in various centers. Few reports support the idea of factor XIII being involved in the formation of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. In this prospective observational study, patients undergoing craniotomy for brain tumors or vascular lesions are investigated concerning the incidence of postoperative pulmonary embolism in respect of possible risk factors (factor XIII activity levels, standard coagulation parameters, tumor entity, blood loss).

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

Antiplatelet Therapy Continuation in Spine Surgery - Its Effect on Postoperative Morbidity and Mortality...

HemorrhageCerebrovascular Accident3 more

The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety of antiplatelet (APA)therapy continuation in patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery (laminectomy, discectomy and foraminotomy), and to gather evidence-based data regarding postoperative outcomes potentially related to APA management.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Catheter-directed Thrombectomy in High and Intermediate-high Risk Pulmonary Embolism

Pulmonary Embolism With Acute Cor Pulmonale

Pulmonary embolism is one of the leading causes of cardiovascular death. Pulmonary embolism may be life-threatening condition with an estimated 30-day mortality rate about 10-30%. In high-risk pulmonary embolism, systemic thrombolysis is indicated, whereas recent development of interventional cardiology has made catheter-directed techniques an important alternative to thrombolytic therapy. The controversy concerns also risk stratification and treatment in intermediate-high risk pulmonary embolism patients. A significant percentage of intermediate-high risk patients with pulmonary embolism may experience rapid hemodynamic deterioration and then the prognosis in this group is significantly worse. Catheter-directed techniques are aimed to quickly relive obstruction and restore pulmonary blood flow, thus increasing cardiac output and immediately restoring hemodynamic stability. The scope of this study is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of catheter-directed approaches in high-risk and intermediate-high risk pulmonary embolism patients.

Unknown status19 enrollment criteria

Japanese Registry of Rivaroxaban Effectiveness & Safety for the Prevention of Recurrence in Patients...

Deep Vein ThrombosisPulmonary Embolism

To clarify the effectiveness and safety of the direct factor Xa inhibitor rivaroxaban in domestic clinical use for patients with deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

The DARE Warfarin CER Study

Deep Venous ThrombosisPulmonary Embolism

Approximately half a million Americans annually experience venous thromboembolic disease, including deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE). Since 2010, four new oral anticoagulants have been approved for marketing in addition to the vitamin K antagonist warfarin. Very limited head-to-head data exists comparing these treatment options, leaving patients, clinicians, and other stakeholders with little guidance for selecting the best strategy that balances recurrence reduction with risk of bleeding. In the DARE Warfarin CER Study, the researchers compare all five currently available oral anticoagulant agents for the extended treatment of DVT and PE, as well as no extended treatment. This study also aims to evaluate whether treatment heterogeneity exists for specific populations, such as older patients or those with renal dysfunction. In a secondary aim, the study will also leverage a database of linked electronic health record-insurance claims to validate diagnosis definitions and account for potential residual confounding by factors unmeasured in claims data. As the patient population includes all Medicare novel anticoagulant users and large numbers of commercially insured and Medicaid patients, the results will likely be transportable to the majority of US patients experiencing a DVT or PE. Pursuant to the objectives of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, a study advisory committee consisting of key stakeholders will be actively involved in the study design and dissemination of results.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Low-dose CT Angiography in the Detection of Acute Pulmonary Embolism: Validation in an Obese Population...

Pulmonary EmbolismObesity1 more

Pulmonary embolism is a common pathology in the general population, whose suspicion is based on the clinical and dosage of D-dimers in particular. The key examination for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism is chest CT angiography (negative predictive value of 98%). The evolution of machines in recent years allows a reduction of possible kilovoltage up to 80 kV, different computer algorithms (iterative reconstructions) to reconstruct the images and thus reduce the irradiation dose with equal image quality (Evaluation of dose CT and adaptive statistical reconstruction with the same group of patients, Qi et al, 2012; Impact of iterative reconstruction on the diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism (PE) on reduced-dose chest CT angiograms, Pontana et al , 2015) in patient populations with a weight of less than 100 kilos. However, obesity is a risk factor for pulmonary embolism and the obese population is increasing, thus requiring optimal management regarding irradiation. Few studies have evaluated the quality of low dose CT angiography in obese patients. One study showed the possibility of performing low-dose thoracic CT angiography (100 kV) in patients up to 125 kg, without loss of subjective quality (but with an impact on objective quality), without the use of current iterative reconstruction techniques (Diagnostic confidence and image quality of CT pulmonary angiography at 100 kVp in overweight and obese patients, Megyeri et al, 2015). The study seek to prove that in the obese patient, with a low dose examination (voltage of the tube at 100 kV) and the current iterative reconstructions, the thoracic angioscanner is not less efficient than in the non obese patient, that the qualities objective and subjective analyzes are maintained. The main purpose is to evaluate and compare thoracic CT angiography with weight and BMI, with identical CT parameters (same voltage, computer reconstruction techniques and same contrast injection protocol), by evaluating the objective and subjective diagnostic quality of the opacification of the pulmonary arteries.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Cardiovascular Complications and COVID-19 (CovCardioVasc-Study)

COVIDAcute Coronary Syndrome5 more

Patients with COVID-19 in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) or hospitalized with severe form have a poor prognosis (almost 30% rate of death). They present often a high cardiovascular risk profile (almost 30% of hypertension and 19% of diabetes). Troponin has been described to be elevated in a high proportion of patients (one fifth of all patients and 50% of non-survivors) suggesting the possibility of cardiomyopathies. High levels of DDimers (81% of non survivors) and fibrin degradation products are also associated with increased risk of mortality suggesting also the possibility of venous thromboembolism. Therefore, screening for cardiomyopathies and venous thromboembolism could represent an important challenge for patients with COVID-19 management.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria
1...686970...74

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs