search

Active clinical trials for "Mitral Valve Insufficiency"

Results 281-290 of 367

Acquisition of Objective Data During Transapical Neochordae Implantation

Mitral Valve InsufficiencyMitral Regurgitation

Mitral Valve repair (MVr) is the gold standard treatment for primary Mitral Regurgitation. Implantation of artificial Gore-Tex chordae (or neochordae implantation) is often used for MVr. The NeoChord DS1000 (NeoChord Inc., Minneapolis, USA) is a device designed to deploy neochordae through transapical access in a beating heart and without cardiopulmonary bypass. NeoChord System is CE marked and therefore authorized for use in Europe. Procedure is conducted under 3D transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) guidance. The device is introduced through the apex of the left ventricular (LV) and the prolapsed leaflet is grabbed and harpooned. The neochordae are thus stretched between the valve and the LV apex. Neochordae length can be precisely adapted to restore a normal coaptation, to treat the regurgitation. Recently, the principal investigator's teams (heart surgery department at Hospices Civils de Lyon and Laboratoire de Génie Electrique et Ferromagnétique lab at Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA) de Lyon, France) created a platform allowing the measurement of the tension applied on neochordae during a NeoChord procedure. A dedicated protocol was designed and approved by the ethical committee of the French Society of Cardiology. The measurement was performed in 7 patients. This preliminary study shows that the technic is safe. It also suggests that chordal tension might be correlated to the quality of MVr: the sub-valvular apparatus appears to be in a low stress state when the structure and the function of the valve are restored. These first findings raise new questions: The mechanism involved in the changes in tensions during chordal length adjustment cannot be understood with current standard medical imaging tools. Numerical simulation technologies could bring physical data in order to approach physical phenomenon underlying these findings. Novel chordal tension measurement tools could lead to a change in current paradigm enabling a MVr based on objective data measurement, instead of sole morphological analysis. Prognostic value of chordal tension must be studied through a larger clinical study and a systematic protocol. A large consortium involving physicians and scientists has been created to address those questions, and a large national funding has been raised to fulfil our objectives over a 4 years period (SIMR project). The present clinical study is the core of this large project.

Withdrawn19 enrollment criteria

PASCAL vs. MitralClip for Mitral Valve Transchatheter Edge-to-Edge Repair

Mitral RegurgitationFunctional Mitral Regurgitation1 more

Comparsion of the current two available TEER systems, the MitraClip with the PASCAL repair system in terms of their effectiveness and safety in patients with degenerative mitral regurgitation (DMR) and in patients with functional regurgitation (FMR), who were referred for an interventional therapy by the heart team due to a high surgical risk profile.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Mitral Valve Regurgitation Quantification From 3D Color Doppler Ultrasound - Standard of Care Data...

Mitral Valve Regurgitation of Any Grade

The study primarily aims to collect standard of care clinical data in a wide spectrum of simple to complex mitral valve regurgitation (MVR) cases to validate a post-processing stand-alone software prototype (QFlow), developed by Philips Research Paris (Medisys). Investigator does not intervene in the care of the patient, but simply collects standard of care images and measurements that are needed for the validation of the investigational software.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Development of an Algorithm to Differentiate Heart Murmurs Using Electronic Stethoscopes

MurmurHeart5 more

The Eko CORE and DUO stethoscopes are FDA-approved electronic devices that have the capacity to record heart sounds. The study seeks to expand murmur detection to include VHD classification through the development of novel ML algorithms that are able to distinguish between systolic vs. diastolic vs. continuous murmurs, as well as classify VHD type and severity, using 4-point auscultation with Eko CORE and DUO electronic stethoscopes to record heart sounds.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Edge-To-Edge Technique Used as a Bailout in Case of Sub-Optimal Mitral Repair: Very Long-Term Results...

Mitral Regurgitation

The absence of residual mitral regurgitation (MR) after mitral valve repair is of paramount importance for the long term durability of the valve repair. Thus, ideally, after weaning from cardio-pulmonary by-pass (CPB) the trans-esophageal echocardiogram (TEE) should show no (or only trivial) residual MR, good coaptation length and no iatrogenic mitral valve stenosis. However, mild or more residual MR can be present in up to 4% of the patients after the initial mitral valve repair and a second CPB run may be necessary to improve the repair results. Mechanism of residual MR can be dynamic, related to systolic anterior motion (SAM) or to severe left ventricular dysfunction, and anatomical, related to residual prolapse, cleft, and suture or ring dehiscence. In several cases medical therapy can be effective in the management of the intra-operatively detected SAM, and residual cleft or suture dehiscence can be easily corrected during a second CPB run. However, in other cases SAM is not responsive to medical therapy or the residual MR jet would require complex and time-consuming techniques to be addressed, or even worse scenario, a mitral valve replacement could be necessary. In such cases the edge-to-edge (EE) technique can be used as a bail-out procedure. The anatomical characteristics of the mitral valve after an initial sub-optimal repair are certainly not ideal for the edge-to-edge technique, due to a possible significant reduction in the valve area, especially in case of posterior leaflet resection or small ring implanted. Nevertheless, in the short term the edge-to-edge technique used to rescue patients with sub-optimal initial repair resulted effective. However, the very long-term results of the edge-to-edge technique used as bail-out are not known. Thus, the aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical and echocardiographic results of the edge-to-edge technique used to rescue patients with initial sub-optimal mitral repair.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

MITRAFIT- Cardinal Adjustable Mitral Repair Follow-up International Postmarketing Surveillance (PMS)...

Mitral Regurgitation

This Study is designed to observe the clinical outcomes of patients requiring mitral repair that were treated with the CE certified Cardinal System.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Strain Imaging in Patients With Functional Mitral Regurgitation, Treated With MitraClip

Mitral RegurgitationHeart Failure

The aim of this study is i) to evaluate left ventricular global longitudinal strain and myocardial work in patients with heart failure and severe functional mitral regurgitation one year after MitraClip implantation and compare these variables with patients treated with optimal medical treatment and ii) to find echocardiographic predictors of clinical response and reverse left ventricular remodeling at one-year follow up.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Percutaneous Mitral Valve Intervention: Predicting Improvements in Left Ventricular Performance...

Mitral RegurgitationMitral Valve Insufficiency

The purpose of this study is to assess the role of cardiac imaging combined with demographic, clinical, and biochemical parameters in predicting outcomes following percutaneous mitral valve intervention in order to facilitate more careful risk stratification, interventional planning and avoidance of high risk futile procedures.The principle objective of this study is to determine if transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) can predict changes in left ventricular (LV) size and function following percutaneous mitral valve intervention (PMVI).

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Transcatheter Para-Valvular Leak Closures

Paravalvular Aortic RegurgitationParavalvular Mitral Regurgitation2 more

Despite improvements in available techniques and prostheses, the long-term evolution of patients after transcatheter paravalvular leak closure remains poorly understood. The objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term outcome of patients after transcatheter paravalvular leak closure and to identify factors predictive of survival. The investigators designed a retrospective multicentre observational registry entitled FFPP (e.g. "Fermeture des Fuites Para-Prothétiques" in French). Seventeen centres from France, Poland, Turkey and Belgium enrolled retrospectively at least one PVLc procedure on aortic, mitral, tricuspid or pulmonary valves without limit in its delay of performance.Follow-up of at least one year was expected

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Deep Sedation Instead of General Anaesthesia in Percutaneous Mitral Valve Repair Using the MitraClip®...

Mitral RegurgitationLocal Anaesthesia1 more

Percutaneous mitral valve repair (PMVR) with the MitraClip® system has emerged as a therapeutic alternative to surgical valve repair in patients who are at high risk and unsuitable for surgery. The PMVR procedure is typically performed under general anaesthesia, but the MitraClip® is also feasible in deep sedation. The aim of this study is to investigate the safety of deep sedation in patients undergoing the PMVR procedure and to evaluate how deep sedation in comparison to general anaesthesia influences procedural time and in-hospital stay.

Completed3 enrollment criteria
1...282930...37

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs