
Women Health Cohort for Breast, Bone and Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary Artery DiseaseA single center cohort which enrolled women who performed mammography, bone densitometry (DEXA), and coronary CT angiography in Seoul National University Bundang Hospital from March 2011 to February 2013.

Metal Allergy In-Stent Restenosis Study
Metal AllergyContact Allergy4 moreIn-stent restenosis remains one of the most challenging problems in patients after coronary artery angioplasty. Angiographically, it is discovered in 10% of the patients after drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation. There are multiple factors causing restenosis, which can be divided into two major groups: first vessel-dependent (based on the vessel's tortuosity, dimensions and lesion's calcification, all leading to suboptimal stent expansion), and second dependent on the inflammatory processes caused by the intervention. Study objectives is the analysis of the possible correlation between allergy to metals utilised during the stent manufacturing (nickel, cobalt, chromium, molybdenum, tungsten) and in-stent restenosis occurence. The angiographic results of stent implantation, and in-stent restenosis will be assessed independently by two skilled interventional cardiologists, and in case of their discrepant opinions, the decision will be made on the basis of the third cardiologist. The tests will be applicated during the hospitalisation, then read after 48 hours and 72 hours, and subsequently interpreted by the skilled dermatologist, during the hospital stay or afterwards.

PET-MR Imaging of Coronary Atherothrombosis
Heart DiseasesIschemicHeart attacks remain a common cause of death throughout the world. The most common initiating event is the formation of a blood clot within the coronary arteries occluding blood supply to the heart. However, we know that thrombus often occurs within the coronary arteries without causing any symptoms, and may be found in patients with stable angina. We wish to investigate whether blood clots within the coronary arteries can be detected in patients who have had a heart attack and in patients with stable angina using combined positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance (PET-MR) imaging. If possible, this may provide a safe and noninvasive means of identifying patients at higher risk of heart attacks. The study will be conducted in Edinburgh Heart Centre and a total of 40 participants will be recruited from the cardiology wards, outpatient clinics and day case unit. Participants will be asked to undergo a single PET-MRI scan in addition to invasive angiography as part of standard care (non-research procedure). During the invasive angiogram procedure, an additional imaging test may be performed called Optical Coherence Tomography to provide images from within the heart blood vessels.

DSE vs. FFR in SCAD and BYSTANDER Lesions
Ischemic Heart DiseaseEnrollment: Patients with stable coronary artery disease (SCAD) and moderate coronary artery stenoses (30-70 %) Patients with acute myocardial infarction and moderate stenosis of non-culprit arteries (NCL; BYSTANDER LESION) Aims: To assess the diagnostic accuracy of dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) and invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurement To assess the prognostic impact of reclassification by a mismatching negative test Hypothesis: DSE and FFR have similar prognostic value in both clinical settings (SCAD and NCL) Considering the strong negative predictive value of both DSE and FFR, one negative test is sufficiently enough to defer revascularisation, even in the case of mismatch

Synergy Between PCI With TAXUS and Cardiac Surgery: SYNTAX Extended Survival
Coronary Artery DiseaseAn investigator-driven, retrospective study to compare long-term survival-data (10-year follow-up) of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), previously enrolled in the SYNTAX trial, who were randomized to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using a paclitaxel (TAXUS) drug-eluting-stent (DES) or coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).

Endothelial and Microvascular Functions in Patients With Myocardial Ischemia
Microcirculation; Biomarkers; Myocardial IschemiaCardiovascular diseases (CVD) are responsible, throughout the world, for high mortality rates and cardiovascular morbidity. Endothelial dysfunction is the earliest marker of clinical atherosclerosis development. Human studies show that endothelial and microvascular dysfunction are independent predictors of ischemic cardiovascular events and long-term prognosis. The study´s objective is to evaluate the endothelial and peripheral microcirculation changes by venous occlusion plethysmography (VOP), nailfoldvideocapillaroscopy (NVC) and serum biomarkers in patients with myocardial ischemia detected by scintigraphy and normal coronarography.

STEMI and Incretins Treatment
STEMICoronary Artery Disease3 moreST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients affected by multivessels coronary artery stenosis, represent a clinical relevant problem. The management and prognosis of these patents are supported by few literature data. Therefore, in this study authors enrolled real world diabetic vs. non diabetic patients admitted for STEMI and associated to multi vessels coronary disease. Then these diabetics were divided in incretin users (6 months of incretin treatment before study enrollment) vs. never incretin users. In these patients authors studied all cause mortality, cardiac mortality, and major adverse cardiac events at 12 months follow up.

Non-invasive Validation of Non-invasive Central Blood Pressure Measurements Using Oscillometric...
Arterial HypertensionHealthy Control2 moreThere 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.

Follow-up of Patients With Multivessel Coronary Artery Disease After CABG
Coronary (Artery); DiseaseThe FAMOUS Trial is a single-center, prospective, randomized study aimed to compare three different strategies (clinical, anatomical, or functional) in preventing MACE after CABG. A total of 600 patients will be included and followed for 5 years. Patients will be randomly allocated (1:1:1) in one of the three follow-up strategies. Patients in the clinical arm will be followed by regular medical visits only every 6 months; patients in the functional arm will undergo a myocardial perfusion scan, and those in the anatomical arm will be subjected to a coronary CT. Non-invasive tests will be performed per protocol and regardless symptoms every 2 years after the first year post-surgery. The primary outcome will be the incidence of death, acute myocardial infarction or myocardial revascularization.

The Sakakibara Health Integrative Profile of Atherosclerotic-Carcinogenesis Hypothesis (SHIP-AC)...
CancersAtheroscleroses2 moreAs previously reported (IJC Heart & Vasculature 2017; 17: 11.), our epidemiological analysis showing high incidence of cancers in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases as compared with those with non-atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases may imply a clinical possibility of a role of atherosclerosis in cancer developments. In the present study, to address our hypothesis that cancer developments may come with a strength of atherosclerosis, we traced an incidence of cancers in a total of 8,856 patients with coronary artery diseases (CAD) for a median follow-up of 1,095 days (interquartile range, 719-1,469 days) using the Sakakibara Health Integrative Profile (SHIP) database.