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Active clinical trials for "Infarction"

Results 1181-1190 of 2689

Drug-eluting Balloon in Acute Myocardial Infarction

Coronary Artery DiseaseAtherosclerosis2 more

The investigators hypothesize that patients with Acute ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction may benefit from primary angioplasty with use of a drug eluting balloon/bare metal stent combination without impairing the process of normal vascular healing and endothelial function. The goals of this study are: To compare 6-month angiographic outcome after primary angioplasty using drug eluting balloon/bare metal stent combination versus drug eluting stent versus bare metal stent. To compare stent apposition and stent endothelialization after primary angioplasty using drug eluting balloon/bare metal stent versus drug eluting stent versus bare metal stent. To compare coronary endothelial function after primary angioplasty using drug eluting balloon/bare metal stent versus drug eluting stent versus bare metal stent.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Study of Optimal Clopidogrel Duration in Patients Receiving Drug Eluting Stents (SCORE Trial)

Myocardial Infarction

Although the optimal duration of clopidogrel (an anti-platelet agent) therapy has been established after bare metal stent implantation in the blood vessels of the heart, there is lack of consensus regarding the optimal duration of therapy after implantation of a drug eluting stents (DES). Current American College of Cardiology guidelines recommend clopidogrel use for at least one year in the absence of contraindications after DES implantation, while recognizing that the optimal duration remains unknown. While an extended clopidogrel therapy (that is beyond the current 1 year recommendation) may increase bleeding complication, it may reduce the rates of adverse cardiovascular events like heart attacks and repeat revascularization procedures. A clinical trial which randomizes patients with an uneventful one year course after a DES implantation, to an additional year of clopidogrel and aspirin therapy versus aspirin alone, will be able to answer the important question about the role of extended (2y) dual anti-platelet therapy with clopidogrel and aspirin after DES implants. The investigators hypothesize that clopidogrel discontinuation at 1 year post-DES implantation is associated with an increase in cardiovascular events during the one year of follow-up period.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Stroke Telemedicine for Arizona Rural Residents Trial

StrokeCerebral Infarction5 more

The STARR network registry consists of a 4 spoke 1 hub system. Which will consist of prospective collection, recording, and regular analysis of telestroke patient consultation and care data for the purpose of quality measure assessment and improvement and benchmarking against other national and international telestroke programs.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of FX06 in the Prevention of Myocardial Reperfusion Injury

Myocardial IschemiaCoronary Disease1 more

The purpose of the study is to evaluate whether FX06 is capable of limiting infarct size following balloon catheterization for acute myocardial infarction.

Completed27 enrollment criteria

Efficacy Study on Early Versus Late Abciximab Administration During Primary Coronary Angioplasty...

Myocardial Infarction

Abciximab has been demonstrated to improve outcome when administered during primary angioplasty in patients with acute myocardial infarction. The Primary Objective of the study is to demonstrate that early (before transportation form remote hospital to the cath lab) abciximab administration during acute myocardial infarction reduces infarct size as compared with late (just prior to PCI) abciximab administration, as measured by delayed enhancement magnetic resonance (MR) at 6 months.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Bivalirudin in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) Undergoing Primary PCI

Myocardial Infarction

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the benefit of bivalirudin in combination with clopidogrel with provisional GPIIb/IIIa inhibitor use, in reducing the bleeding complications associated with early invasive management of patients presenting with an ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) and undergoing primary PCI, while providing similar rates of ischemic events when compared to published results of relevant trials.

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Study of Oral PG-116800 Following a Heart Attack

Myocardial InfarctionHeart Failure1 more

The main purpose of the study is to test whether a possible new drug (called PG-116800) can prevent some of the damage to heart muscle in patients who have had a heart attack. The study will also supply information regarding possible uses of this compound in cardiovascular disease.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Conservative Versus Liberal Red Cell Transfusion in Myocardial Infarction Trial: The CRIT Pilot...

Myocardial InfarctionAnemia

The purpose of this trial is to determine whether a conservative or a liberal blood transfusion strategy is better for patients with a heart attack and a low blood count.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

APRICOT-3: Antithrombotics in the Prevention of Reocclusion In COronary Thrombolysis -3

Myocardial Infarction

Reocclusion of the infarct artery is observed in about 30% of patients within three months after successful thrombolysis for acute myocardial infarction (MI). Reocclusion is associated with an increased risk of death, reinfarction and the need for revascularization. Even in the absence of clinical reinfarction, reocclusion results in impaired left ventricular (LV) recovery, leaving patients at increased risk of developing heart failure in the long-term. Prevention of reocclusion is therefore warranted. In previous trials, severity of the infarct related stenosis was the only independent predictor of reocclusion. With a lack of clinical predictors of reocclusion, many cardiologists therefore empirically favor routine revascularization after successful thrombolysis. The APRICOT-3 will be the first randomized trial in the current era of improved angioplasty techniques to study the question of whether a routine invasive strategy after successful thrombolysis can reduce the incidence of reocclusion and subsequently improve clinical outcome and LV-function. After successful thrombolysis, patients will be randomized to either a routine invasive strategy or an ischemia-guided strategy. The investigators expect to demonstrate a lower reocclusion rate at the 6-month follow-up angiography (primary endpoint) and fewer associated events (death, reinfarction, revascularization, admissions for heart failure) in the routine invasive arm. In search of non-invasive parameters predictive of reocclusion, laboratory analysis of several coagulation and inflammatory markers will be performed. Finally, pooled analysis of all 3 APRICOT trials will focus on the identification of clinical predictors of reocclusion that can easily be obtained by history and physical examination.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Advanced Ultrasound Methods in the Assessment of Carotid Plaque Instability

Internal Carotid Artery Stenosis With Infarction

The primary aim of this project is to assess if advanced ultrasound methods such as SMI (Superb microvascular Imaging) and SWE (Shear Wave Elastography) can identify intraplaque neovascularization and plaque tissue stiffness in carotid artery plaques and relate these results to ipsilateral cerebrovascular symptoms. The secondary aim of this project is to assess the level of agreement between the structural plaque characteristics assessed by advanced ultrasound examinations such as SMI, SWE, CEUS (Contrast enhanced ultrasound), GSM (Plaque gray-scale-median) and carotid MRI, metabolic activity of plaque assessed by 18F-FDG PET/CT with histology as the gold standard. Findings from the methods mentioned above will be related to cerebrovascular symptoms, blood tests (cholesterol-tot, LDL, HDL, CRP, leukocytes, glucose, HbA1c) and other cardiovascular risk factors at inclusion and upon 1 year follow up.

Active3 enrollment criteria
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