Long-term Radial Artery Occlusion in Coronary Diagnosis and Intervention Via Distal Radial Approach...
Coronary Artery DiseaseDistal Radial Artery1 moreRandomized-controlled trial to comparison of the long-term radial artery occlusion in coronary diagnosis and intervention via distal vs conventional radial approach
Differential Effect of High (200μg/kg/Min) Adenosine Dose on Fractional Flow Reserve in Patients...
Coronary Artery DiseaseFractional flow reserve (FFR) is an established invasive method for assessing the physiological significance of coronary artery stenosis. However, in recent studies it has been observed and reported some degree of variation in the fraction of the coronary artery to the aortic pressure (Pd / Pa) during the infusion of standard adenosine dose (140mg/kg/min). The observed variation may be attributed to a failure to achieve maximal hyperemia with the normal dose. The administration of adenosine at a higher dose (200μg/kg /min) may influence coronary flow reserve (FFR) eliminating Pd / Pa variation during adenosine infusion. This is a prospective study which will be conducted in patients after coronary angiography with at least one angiographic lesion ≥50% in coronary vessels. Patients after written consent will undergo assessment of lesion severity with FFR under a three-minute infusion of adenosine 140mg/kg/min. In patients during steady state hyperaemia (determined by visual assessment) exhibiting variation in Pd / Pa ratio ≥ 0.05 (e.g. difference of max Pd/Pa minus min Pd/Pa) the examination will be repeated after 5 min with three-minute infusion under high dose adenosine (200mg/kg/min). The minimum ratio Pd/Pa per 3 beats will be offline analyzed. The FFR during steady hyperemia state is defined as the average of the minimum ratio Pd / Pa per three beats.
Optimal Lesion Preparation With Non-compliant Balloons Before Implantation Of Bioresorbable Scaffolds...
Coronary Artery DiseaseAngina2 moreStudy aim : To compare a novel strategy of lesion preparation with noncompliant balloons before implantation of BVS (Bioresorbable Vascular Scaffold). Hypothesis: Predilatation with non-compliant balloons could facilitate optimal deployment of BVS. By achieving good scaffold apposition a need for post-dilatation could be significantly reduced. This is expected to result in better short- and long-term outcomes.
HeartHab, Can a Patient-tailored Application Support Coronary Artery Disease Patients During Rehabilitation?...
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe HeartHab study is a pilot trial in which coronary artery disease patients (n = 15-30) are given the HeartHab application. The HeartHab application is a smarthphone based mobile application that serves as a secondary prevention tool, to support cardiac patients after their phase II cardiac rehabilitation program. During study period (4-6 weeks), participating patients will be asked to use the application. HeartHab includes a module devoted to therapy compliance, one to exercise training prescription and one to risk factor control. HeartHab aims to motivate the patient to improve his/her self-management skills and hence decrease cardiovascular morbidity (and mortality). Motivational aspects and usability data will be collected during study period by means of app logs and/or questionnaires/interviews.
cPSTA System CADLAD Study
Coronary Artery DiseaseThis study is primarily designed to collect resting phase signals from eligible subjects using the Phase Signal Recorder (PSR) prior to coronary angiography to machine learn and test an algorithm for detecting the presence of significant coronary artery disease in symptomatic adult patient.
Assessing the Efficacy of CARDIOgoniometry (CGM) to Determine Physiologically Significant Stenosis...
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe CARDIOFLOW study compares the standard test, a pressure wire test called fractional flow reserve (FFR), with a new method that is based on taking a detailed "3D" ECG called Cardiogoniometry (CGM). FFR is an angiographic technique which measures the physiological significance of a coronary stenosis and trial data has shown that basing management decisions on this data improves prognosis. However FFR studies are expensive and invasive, whereas CGM is painless and simply involves placing 4 sticky pads to the patient's chest / back and is similar to an ECG (heart tracing). The investigators want to see whether we can use this new method to find out whether treatment with coronary angioplasty would be of benefit. If so, then in the future, clinicians could use this method (CGM) rather than pressure wire assessment (FFR). This would have several advantages; in particular, it can be easily performed in the clinic and avoids the need to use an expensive pressure wire.
Development of a PET-MR Myocardial Perfusion Examination Using Regadenoson
Ischemic Heart DiseaseThe objective for this pilot study is to develop an optimized, clinically usable myocardial PET-MR perfusion protocol and to determine which of all data potentially available should be acquired for a clinical myocardial perfusion examination. Hypothesis: The hypothesis is that high resolution, high sensitivity DCE MRI could replace the rest PET myocardial perfusion imaging, significantly decreasing examination time and patient radiation dose while maintaining the comprehensive reference-quality PET myocardial stress perfusion coverage. The primary outcome will be comparison of diagnostic accuracy of each combination of imaging to detect clinically significant coronary artery stenosis (≥70% diameter stenosis).
Comparative Effectiveness of the Minimally Invasive Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
Coronary Artery DiseaseMyocardial Ischemia1 moreThe purpose of this study is to compare three different revascularization strategies in patients with multi-vessel coronary disease: MICS CABG, OPCABG and ONCABG. The study hypothesis: MICS CABG (Minimally invasive cardiac surgery coronary artery bypass grafting) has advantages in comparison with conventional off-pump (OPCABG) and on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (ONCABG) concerning major adverse cardiac and cerebral events (MACCE) and procedural success.
Reducing Radioisotope Dose: the Half-Dose CZT Study
Coronary Artery DiseaseThis is a pilot study to see whether cardiac imaging can be performed using half the standard dose of radioisotope.
A Study of Regadenoson in Subjects Undergoing Stress Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (MPI) Using Multidetector...
Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)The purpose of this study is to compare Multidetector Computed Tomography (MDCT) and Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) stress myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) with regadenoson in order to detect the presence or absence of reversible defects.