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Active clinical trials for "Mitral Valve Insufficiency"

Results 311-320 of 367

Prospective Analysis of the Feasibility of the PASCAL Spacer Technology for Transcatheter Mitral...

Mitral Regurgitation

To identify changes on mitral valve morphology and functionality by the application of the PascalTM in MR.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Use of Pre-operative Global Longitudinal Strain to Predict Post-operative Left Ventricular Dysfunction...

Severe Mitral RegurgitationPreserved Ventricular Ejection Fraction

Primary mitral regurgitation (MR) is the second most frequent valve disease requiring surgery and it is important to identify patients whose outcome could be improved with surgery by considering the risks and benefits. The current guidelines recommend surgery in patients with symptomatic severe mitral regurgitation or in asymptomatic patients who develop early signs of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction as a result of the MR. However, it remains difficult to determine optimal timing for surgery with the current guidelines. Early-stage LV dysfunction with normal LVEF predicts post-operative LV decompensation and poor prognosis and longitudinal myocardial function is suitable for detection of minor myocardial damage in patients with MR. Thus, inestigators want to study the value of LV global longitudinal strain (GLS) to predict postoperative LV dysfunction in patients with chronic severe MR and preserved pre-operative LVEF. The principal aim is to prove that the optimal timing for surgery, in asymptomatic chronic severe primary MR with preserved LVEF, is before GLS alteration, and that investigators should not wait for LV dilatation of dysfunction.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Minimally Invasive or Conventional Edge-To-Edge Repair for Severe Mitral Regurgitation Due to Bileaflet...

Barlow's DiseaseProlapse; Mitral

The study evaluates the long-term results of patients affected by bileaflet prolapse in Barlow's Disease, treated with edge-to-edge technique between 1997 and 2011.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Evaluating Infrasonic Hemodynography

Aortic StenosisMitral Regurgitation5 more

This comparative diagnostic accuracy study will determine the accuracy of a noninvasive wearable infrasonic sensor to detect the mechanical, electrical, and hemodynamic function of the cardiovascular system.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Left Atrial Distensibility to Predict Left Ventricular Filling Pressure and Prognosis in Patients...

Mitral Valve InsufficiencyAtrial Fibrillation1 more

A large left atrial (LA) volume, which represents chronic diastolic dysfunction, is associated with a poor outcome, regardless of systolic function. Thus, the LA volume provides a long-term view of whether the patient has diastolic dysfunction, regardless of the loading conditions present at the examination, such as hemoglobin A1c in diabetes mellitus. To date, the relation between the LA volume and left ventricular (LV) filling pressure has not been confirmed directly by simultaneous echocardiographic catheterization. The present study, therefore, assessed the correlation between the LA volume and LV filling pressure in patients with severe mitral regurgitation (MR). Because the LA pressure increases to maintain adequate LV diastolic filling, increased atrial wall tension tends to dilate the chamber and stretch the atrial myocardium. Therefore, the lower the ability of the left atrium to stretch, the greater the pressure in the left atrium. The study is designed to assess 1) the relationship between LV filling pressure and LA distensibility, and 2) the power of left atrial distensibility to predict the prognosis, including operation mortality, the rate of post-operation atrial fibrillation, and late heart failure event in patients with severe mitral regurgitation.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Is Mitral Annuloplasty an Effective Treatment for Severe Atrial Functional MR?

Mitral Regurgitation

Atrial functional mitral regurgitation (MR) is caused by annular dilatation and flattering associated with altered atria/annulus dynamics in patients with severely dilated left atrium and normal leaflets anatomy. Inadequate leaflets adaption is considered a mechanistic culprit as well. Prevalence of at least moderate atrial functional MR varies between 4.7% and 7% in patients with permanent and long standing persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) and is even higher in patients with Heart Failure with preserved Ejection Fraction (HFpEF). Unlike secondary MR in the setting of left ventricular disease, results of surgical treatment of severe atrial functional MR has remained largely unspoken. The aim of this study is to analyze short and mid-term results of isolated annuloplasty in patients with severe, symptomatic atrial functional MR, in comparission to a matched cohort of patients with secondary MR.

Completed31 enrollment criteria

Immediate Suboptimal Result of Mitral Valve Repair: Late Implications in a Matched Cohort Study...

Mitral Regurgitation

Mitral valve regurgitation is a pathology affecting the left atrioventricular valve, conditioning the loss of the normal unidirectionality of the atrioventricular flow and therefore volumetric and pressure overload of the left heart chambers. In industrialized countries, the most common etiology of mitral regurgitation is degenerative mitral disease. Mitral valve repair surgery represents the gold standard for the treatment of severe degenerative mitral regurgitation. The expected optimal result would be the absence of residual post-procedural mitral regurgitation, even if it is not uncommon to obtain a valve with residual regurgitation of a mild degree. In some cases, for various reasons (technical difficulties, long aortic clamping time, advanced age, high pre-operative surgical risk), a suboptimal result is accepted, i.e. a post-procedural residual mitral regurgitation of even a moderate degree ( 0, 1+, or 2+/4+). The aim of the present study is to evaluate the late clinical and echocardiographic implications of suboptimal mitral valve repair with a paired-data cohort study

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Exercise-induced in Secondary Mitral Regurgitation: Analysis of Echocardiographic Parameters at...

Cardiac Disease

Secondary mitral insufficiency is a common complication of heart failure, aggravating symptoms and prognosis, and may be responsible for worsening dyspnea, pulmonary edema, and excess mortality. It is essentially a ventricular rather than a valvular disease, whose origin may be ischemic or not. It is induced by a geometrical and contractile modification of the left ventricle which causes an imbalance between the tensile and the closing forces of the mitral valve thus causing a defect of coaptation and the increase of the surface between the mitral leaves and the ring in systole (tenting). Dynamic mitral insufficiency is defined by changes in the degree of severity of regurgitation as a function of hemodynamic conditions. During exercise, the course of mitral insufficiency is variable and is not predicted by the degree of regurgitation at rest. The worsening of the leak is also well correlated with the onset of dyspnea on exertion in patients with left Ventricular Ejection Fraction heart failure (LVEF reduced). Nevertheless, there is little data available in the literature on the factors predisposing to the development of stress-related mitral insufficiency, as well as its clinical and echocardiographic impact in the cardiac insufficiency patient, particularly in the case of preserved LVEF (6.7%). The identification of echocardiographic data at rest to predict and anticipate the behavior of mitral insufficiency in the effort (aggravation or stability / disappearance), would allow a simplified evaluation and a better management in this population of patients for which the evaluation in echography of effort can be technically complex and limited (difficulty of quantification of the mitral leak, time of effort sometimes too short ...).

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing in Severe Mitral Regurgitation

Mitral Valve RegurgitationPulmonary Hypertension

The purpose of this study is the evaluation of cardiac and pulmonary response to cardiopulmonary exercise in severe mitral regurgitation and its variation under treatment (surgical mitral valve repair, percutaneous mitral valve repair, optimal medical treatment). The study is conducted as a prospective, observational, single-center study. Patients suffering from symptomatic severe mitral regurgitation will be eligible, if they are referred to the University Hospital of Regensburg, Germany, for further diagnostic procedures and heart team discussion. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing is performed comprising standardized stress echocardiography as well as ergospirometry. Additional detailed assessment will be conducted including standardized questionary, clinical examination, transesophageal echocardiography and measurement of biomarkers.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

The Right Ventricular Pulmonary Circulation Continuum in Mitral Valve Disease Study

Mitral RegurgitationPulmonary Hypertension

Mitral regurgitation (MR) is a prevalent valvular heart pathology. Indications for surgery include symptoms, impaired left ventricular function or enlarging dimensions, new onset atrial fibrillation, pulmonary hypertension, asymptomatic status with a high likelihood of success. Asymptomatic severe primary MR can be initially monitored without impairing long term survival. However, significant symptoms or impairment of left ventricular function is associated with worse prognosis due to long term heart failure. Some physicians wait for early symptoms before referring for surgery and this is reflected by a great variation in referral patterns, but symptomatic status is subjective and difficult to assess. Nearly all of the surgical indications are based on expert opinion rather than significant evidence base. The primary aim of this project is to improve the current guidelines for surgery for primary MR by finding an objective marker of functional capacity which correlates with surrogates of prognosis and detects early decline, but returns to normal after surgery.

Completed3 enrollment criteria
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