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Active clinical trials for "Myocardial Ischemia"

Results 1271-1280 of 3152

Adipose Tissue and Inflammation in Coronary Heart Disease

Coronary Heart Disease

The aims of the present project are to study possible differences in inflammatory gene expression and protein secretion in various compartments of adipose tissue being exposed during open cardiac surgery in patients with coronary heart disease undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery.

Active2 enrollment criteria

Assessment of Loading With the P2Y12 Inhibitor Ticagrelor or Clopidogrel to Halt Ischemic Events...

Coronary Artery DiseaseMyocardial Ischemia3 more

The new P2Y12 inhibitors prasugrel (Efient®-Effient®) and ticagrelor (Brilique®-Brilinta®) have shown promising results in the respective TRITON and PLATO trials making of prasugrel and ticagrelor recommended first line treatments for acute coronary syndrome ACS (ESC Guidelines: Class 1 LOE B). These two drugs showed superiority over clopidogrel in ACS patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), by the dramatic diminution of stent thrombosis, the reduction in death or Myocardial Infarction (MI) as well as the reduction in death in a meta-analysis. The field of elective PCI (stable patients) has not been studied with these 2 new drugs and clopidogrel remains the standard of care. However, off-label use of prasugrel and ticagrelor is increasing in patients undergoing high risk elective PCI (left main, diabetics, multiple stenting, high risk of stent thrombosis, no clopidogrel pretreatment…) but is not supported by scientific evidence. More than half of PCI patients undergo elective stenting for proven ischemia and/or stable angina, a relatively safe procedure with the use of the latest generation of stents. However complications remain either frequent when considering PCI-related myonecrosis/myocardial injury that have been linked to the prognosis of patients or rare but serious when considering stent thrombosis, Q wave MI or stroke, leaving room for improvement with these two newest drugs. The investigators propose to perform a multicenter international study in stable patients undergoing elective PCI with a randomization between clopidogrel and ticagrelor. The investigators hypothesize that this study will show superiority of the new P2Y12 inhibitor over clopidogrel in elective PCI on the primary ischemic endpoint (peri-procedural MI and myocardial injury) without significant excess bleeding (BARC definition).

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Quantitative Myocardial Perfusion Reserve by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance

Myocardial Ischemia

The purpose of this study is to validate a full-automated post-processing software for quantitative perfusion of the myocardium with magnetic resonance imaging.

Active5 enrollment criteria

Verapamil vs Heparin in Transradial Procedures

Heart DiseaseIschemic

Transradial approach (TRA) for cardiac catheterization and percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) is increasingly being used worldwide. At the present is unknown the cocktail of agents necessary to minimize local access site complications. The investigators planned a prospective randomized clinical trial to test the superiority of verapamil vs. heparin in the reduction of access site related complications.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

T-provisional Stenting vs Mini-Crush in Chronic Total Occlusions (CTO)

Ischemic Heart DiseaseCoronary Atherosclerosis2 more

The aim is to compare the results of using T-provisional and Mini-Crush stenting techniques in patients with bifurcation lesions in the CTO segment.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Aerobic Exercise on Ventilatory Efficiency in CAD Patients

Coronary Artery DiseaseExercise Addiction2 more

The purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that patients with coronary artery disease with lower aerobic fitness exhibit greater responsiveness on improving ventilatory efficiency after aerobic exercise training.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

DUrable Polymer-based STent CHallenge of Promus Element Versus ReSolute Integrity in an All Comers...

Acute Coronary SyndromeAngina Pectoris6 more

The introduction of drug-eluting stents (DES) in the treatment of coronary artery disease has led to a significant reduction in morbidity but there are further demands on DES performance. Such demands are an optimized performance in very challenging coronary lesions; third generation DES were developed in an effort to further improve DES performance in such challenging lesions. Two CE-certified third generation DES (Resolute Integrity and Promus Element stents) are currently available; there are no data that indicate an advantage of one of these DES over the other.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

The ABC Trial Does All-Blood Cardioplegia Prevent Blood Transfusion in Cardiac Surgery? A Single...

Coronary Artery DiseaseValvular Heart Disease

This study is a single centre pilot for a randomized trial comparing all-blood cardioplegia to more dilute 4:1 blood cardioplegia during cardiac surgery. The hypothesis is that all-blood cardioplegia will be associated with less blood transfusion and better cardiac function.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Elixir Medical Clinical Evaluation of the DESolve Myolimus Eluting Bioresorbable Coronary Stent...

Coronary Artery Disease

This prospective, consecutive enrolment, single-arm study will enroll up to 15 patients with single de novo, Type A lesions < 10 mm in length and located in a native coronary artery with a reference vessel diameter of 2.75 mm - 3.0 mm as measured by both offline QCA and IVUS. All patients will receive a 3.0 x 14mm DESolve Stent loaded with approximately 40 mcg of Myolimus. Angiographic and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) will be completed for all patients at baseline and at 6 months. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) will will be completed for all patients at baseline and at 6 months. Multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT) will be conducted on all patients enrolled at 12 and 24 months.

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Pharmacokinetics of Everolimus in Absorb BVS in Patients With Coronary Artery Lesions

Coronary Artery DiseaseCoronary Artery Stenosis2 more

The ABSORB III PK sub-study is a prospective, open-label, non-blinded study enrolling approximately 12 subjects in up to 5 US sites. ABSORB III PK sub-study is a part of ABSORB III RCT (NCT01751906). The objective is to determine the pharmacokinetics of everolimus delivered by the Absorb BVS in a separate and non-randomized cohort of subjects who only receive Absorb BVS with a maximum of two de novo native coronary artery lesions after implantation of the Absorb BVS. Note: The ABSORB III PK subjects will not contribute to the determination of the ABSORB III RCT primary endpoint.

Completed59 enrollment criteria
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