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Active clinical trials for "Myocardial Ischemia"

Results 41-50 of 3152

Impact of Colchicine on Peri-Operative Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events in Patients With Prior...

Coronary Artery Disease

Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in Veterans. Inflammation in the arteries of the heart may increase the risk of cardiac death. Patients with heart disease undergoing major surgery are at increased risk of complications after surgery, including heart attack, stroke, and death. The proposed research seeks to better understand the role of inflammation in the damage to the heart and blood vessels after major surgery. This research also seeks to identify the potential beneficial role of a safe medication, colchicine, which has direct effects on inflammatory cells and has been used in the treatment of inflammatory diseases for more than 2000 years, on reducing the rate of complications after surgery. With its quick onset of action and excellent safety profile, colchicine may have the potential to reduce risk of heart injury, stroke, or death after major surgery.

Recruiting24 enrollment criteria

ADVANCEd NanoTherapies Dual Active Pharmacological Ingredient (Dual-API) Drug-Coated Balloon to...

Coronary Artery Disease

This prospective, single-arm, multi-center, safety and feasibility first-in-human study will evaluate the safety and feasibility of the SirPlux™ Duo Dual-API Coated PTCA Balloon Catheter to treat de-novo lesions between ≥2.25 and ≤4.0 mm in patients with stable symptomatic coronary artery disease.

Recruiting56 enrollment criteria

Reducing Hopelessness Through Improved Physical Activity in Adults With Heart Disease: With COVID-19...

Ischemic Heart DiseaseHopelessness4 more

After a 30-year decline, heart disease is projected to increase up to 18% by 2030. Participation rates in cardiac rehabilitation remain extremely low and hopeless individuals are less likely to participate. This innovative study has the potential to advance science, improve patient care, and improve patient outcomes by demonstrating the effectiveness of the Heart Up! program to increase physical activity and reduce hopelessness in patients with heart disease. Hopelessness is associated with a 3.4 times increased risk of mortality or nonfatal myocardial infarction in patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD), independent of depression. Hopelessness has been identified in 27-52% of patients with IHD and can persist for up to 12 months after hospital discharge. Hopelessness, a negative outlook and sense of helplessness toward the future, can be a temporary response to an event (state) or a habitual outlook (trait). Hopelessness is associated with decreased physical functioning and lower physical activity (PA) levels in individuals with IHD. While research has investigated strategies to increase PA among IHD patients in general, the study team is the only group to design an intervention to promote PA specifically in hopeless IHD patients. The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to establish the effectiveness of our 6-week mHealth intervention (Heart Up!) to promote increased PA in hopeless patients with IHD. A total of 225 hopeless IHD patients will be enrolled from a large community teaching hospital in the Midwest. Patients will be randomized (75 per group) to one of three groups: 1) motivational social support (MSS) from a nurse, 2) MSS from a nurse with additional significant other support (SOS), or 3) attention control (AC). It is hypothesized that 1) The MSS with SOS group will have the greatest increase in average minutes of moderate to vigorous PA per day at 8 and 24 weeks as compared to the MSS only or AC groups; 2) Greater increase in minutes of moderate to vigorous PA per day will be associated with decreased state hopelessness levels from baseline to weeks 8 and 24; and 3) Increased social support and increased motivation will mediate the effects of Heart Up! on a greater increase in moderate to vigorous PA at 8 and 24 weeks. The findings from this study could transform care for IHD patients who are hopeless by promoting self-management of important PA goals that can contribute to better health outcomes.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Rehabilitation at Home Using Mobile Health In Older Adults After Hospitalization for Ischemic Heart...

Ischemic Heart Disease

RESILIENT is a phase II, multi-center, prospective, pragmatic randomized clinical trial with blinded assessment of the primary endpoint. This study aims to evaluate whether mHealth-CR improves functional capacity in older adults (age ≥65) with IHD compared with standard traditional cardiac rehabilitation care. A total of 400 eligible patients will be randomized in 3:1 manner to mHealth-CR versus usual care for assessment of primary endpoint. Enrollment will occur over approximately 42 months with an expected minimum of 3 months follow-up per participant.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Assessment of Quitting Versus Using Aspirin Therapy In Patients Treated With Oral Anticoagulation...

Coronary Artery Disease

Long-term aspirin (ASA) is the standard recommended antithrombotic therapy in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD), especially following stenting (Class I, Level A). Long-term oral anticoagulation (OAC) is the standard antithrombotic therapy in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) associated with one or more risk factor for stroke (Class I, Level A). During the first year following acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and/or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), several studies evaluating the combination of OAC treatment and antiplatelet therapy are either already published or ongoing. At distance of the index ACS and/or PCI, patients with stable CAD and concomitant AF remain at particular high-risk of ischemic (3 to 4 times higher as compared to patients with stable CAD without AF) and bleeding events. Antithrombotic management of these patients is subsequently highly challenging in clinical practice. The European task force suggests that the use of a full-dose anticoagulant monotherapy without any antiplatelet therapy should be the default strategy in such patients with both, AF and stable CAD. However, evidences are sparse and weak to support such a strategy (only observational studies with many biases) and no randomized trial has assessed this question. These patients, especially those at high-risk of recurrent ischemic events (post- ACS, diabetes, multivessel CAD…) may benefit from the combination of OAC and aspirin at long-term. Indeed the crude event rate of ischemic events is much higher than the crude event rate of bleeding in this specific population. Ischemic events are 2 to 3 times more frequent than bleeding in daily practice. The benefit/risk ratio of these two different strategies (ASA in combination with OAC vs. OAC alone) in patients at high-risk of recurrent coronary and vascular events remains unknown. Dual therapy with full-dose anticoagulation and ASA may lead to higher risk of major bleeding, while stopping ASA in stabilized high-risk patients after PCI may lead to poorer outcome regarding ischemic events. The coordinating investigators therefore designed a double blind placebo controlled trial in order to assess the optimal antithrombotic regimen that should be pursued long-life in this subset of patients.

Recruiting37 enrollment criteria

De-Adoption of Beta-Blockers in Patients With Stable Ischemic Heart Disease

Stable Ischemic Heart DiseaseCoronary Artery Disease1 more

Patients with heart disease are often prescribed many medications and these patients may experience drug interactions or negative drug related side effects. With newer medications and treatments available, it is not well known whether older drugs, such as beta-blockers, are still an effective and safe option for treating heart disease. Some evidence suggests beta-blockers should be continued, whereas other evidence suggests beta-blockers might cause unnecessary harm. The study hopes to determine whether continuation or discontinuation of beta-blockers will affect long term cardiovascular outcomes. The study investigators will also examine how beta-blockers continuation or discontinuation affects several quality of life measures.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Controlled Trial of High-risk Coronary Intervention With Percutaneous Left Ventricular Unloading...

Ischemic Heart DiseaseCoronary Artery Disease

Over 100,000 coronary stent procedures, where small balloons are used to stretch open a narrowed blood vessel, are performed every year in the United Kingdom to treat people who have conditions such as angina or have suffered a heart attack. For most patients the risk of complications is low, but for some, there is a higher risk of their heart failing during the procedure. Heart failure is a serious complication which can need treatment with a life support machine and lead to major damage to the heart muscle or even death. These risks are greatest in patients with severely diseased heart arteries and those who already have weakened heart muscle. A new technology may be able to help with this problem. It consists of a small heart pump which is placed in the heart's main pumping chamber (the left ventricle, LV). This pump is known as a LV unloading device. The LV unloading device is inserted into the heart through a blood vessel in the leg and supports the heart muscle. It is removed at the end of the procedure or when the heart can pump safely on its own. Whilst this heart pump is promising, it comes with some risks of its own. These include bleeding and damage to the arteries in the legs. It is also expensive, costing £8,000 per operation. Currently, there is no strong evidence to guide the use of this device. The CHIP-BCIS3 study aims to determine whether these heart pumps are beneficial and cost-effective in patients receiving a stenting procedure who are at high-risk of complications.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Instantaneous Wave-free Ratio Guidance Strategy Evaluation in the Treatment of Multivessel Acute...

Cardiac IschemiaAcute Coronary Syndrome

A single-center, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded end-point clinical trial of instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR) guidance strategy impact on clinical outcomes in multivessel acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients.

Recruiting16 enrollment criteria

iSGLT2 in Prevention of Acute Kidney Injury in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus Undergoing CABG Extracorporeal...

Diabetes MellitusType 23 more

Introduction: Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is a condition known to be associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) and its role as promoter of atherosclerosis is well stablished. The revascularization surgery is commonly indicated to patients with multivessel coronary disease and kidney injury is a prevalent complication in post operation. This work aims to evaluate the impact of a strategy to control Diabetes Mellitus using inhibitors of sodium-glucose cotransporters (ISGLT2) in diabetics patients with assigned myocardial revascularization with cardiopulmonary bypass

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of One-Stage Hybrid Coronary Revascularization

Multivessel Coronary Artery Disease

Coronary revascularization could be accomplished either by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). PCI with drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation is featured by minimal invasive, low complication and rapid rehabilitation. CABG is characterized by improved long-term, event-free survival attributable to the use of left internal mammary artery (LIMA) graft. Hybrid coronary revascularization (HCR) consists of LIMA bypass to left anterior coronary descending artery (LAD) by minimal invasive direct coronary artery bypass (MIDCAB) and PCI of other stenosed coronary arteries with DES implantation. One-step HCR entails LIMA-LAD anastomosis performed through MIDCAB, immediately followed by PCI for non-LAD lesions, sometimes for diagonal branch, in the hybrid operating room. Limited data are available in comparing one-step HCR to PCI alone for the treatment of multivessel coronary artery disease(MVD). The current EAST-HCR study will investigate the efficacy and safety of one-step HCR for patients with MVD, as comparing to PCI alone.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria
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