Safety and Efficacy of the Combo Bio-engineered Sirolimus-eluting Stent Versus the Nano Polymer-free...
Coronary ArteriosclerosisTo evaluate the safety, efficacy and deliverability of the Combo bio-engineered sirolimus-eluting stent versus the Nano polymer-free sirolimus- eluting stents in the treatment of patients with de novo stenotic lesions of native coronary artery.
Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing Coronary Bypass Grafting With or Without Cardiopulmonary Bypass...
Ischemic Heart DiseaseCoronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is a well established treatment modality for patients with coronary artery disease. For 30 years now CABG operations have been performed with the help of the heart lung machine (Cardiopulmonary bypass). However, the heart lung machine is believed to be responsible for many of the side effects and complications seen in patients following CABG surgery. The organs most commonly affected are the brain, blood constituents, lungs and kidneys. In the last few years, stabilising devices have been developed that allow CABG operations to be performed safely without the use of the heart lung machine. Our hypothesis was that CABG done without the heart lung machine may be better tolerated by patients resulting in lower morbidity, increased functional outcome and shorter hospital length of stay. Enrolment into the trial was from 1998 to 2003 and included 300 patients. The last patient was enrolled in June of 2003. The initial results from the study suggest that excellent results can be obtained with both techniques and contrary to others no advantages could be demonstrated in in-hospital outcomes of patients performed without cardiopulmonary bypass (Legare et al. Circulation 2005).
Both Exercise and Adenosine Stress Testing
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to compare the 2-year cardiac outcomes for women with limited exercise capability based on the resuls of either pharmacological stress myocardial perfusion imaging or a combined protocol that incorporates both exercise and pharmacological stress. The goal of the study is to compare these two methods for patient tolerability, safety and prognostic value
A Coronary IVUS Study to Compare Torcetrapib/Atorvastatin to Atorvastatin Alone in Subjects With...
Coronary DiseaseCoronary Arteriosclerosis1 moreThe Torcetrapib project was terminated on December 2, 2006 due to safety findings. To look at ultrasound images taken in the blood vessels of the heart and to look at various lipids in the blood of people with known coronary heart disease
Intra-Individual Comparison of Sirolimus and Paclitaxel Coated Stent (FRE-RACE Study)
Coronary Artery DiseaseThe main objective of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of the Sirolimus eluting Cypher Select(TM) stent in reducing angiographic in-stent late loss in de novo native coronary lesions as compared to the TAXUS(TM) Paclitaxel-eluting stent in patients presenting with two or more coronary artery stenoses (prospective, randomized, intra-individual comparison).
EWISE: Study of Eplerenone in Women With Chest Pain, Coronary Vascular Dysfunction and Evidence...
Ischemic Heart DiseaseSome women have chest pain even without having a blockage in one of the major blood vessels that supplies blood to the heart. In many of these women the microscopic (small) blood vessels in the heart do not function normally. This study seeks to determine if treatment with eplerenone, a commercially available diuretic, can improve the function of these microscopic blood vessels and, possibly, improve the chest pain.
Efficacy and Safety of the ACAT Inhibitor CS-505 (Pactimibe) for Reducing the Progression of Coronary...
Coronary Heart DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to learn if CS-505 is safe and effective for slowing down or possibly reversing the buildup of tissue, cells and fatty deposits (plaque) in the blood vessels of the heart (coronary artery atherosclerosis).
A Cluster Randomized Trial to Assess the Impact of Opinion Leader Endorsed Evidence Summaries on...
Coronary DiseaseIschemic Heart Disease1 moreBACKGROUND: Although much has been written about the influence of local opinion leaders on clinical practice, there have been few controlled studies of their effect, and almost none have attempted to change prescribing in the community for chronic conditions such as congestive heart failure (CHF) or ischemic heart disease (IHD). These two conditions are common and there is very good evidence about how to best prevent morbidity and mortality - and very good evidence that quality of care is, in general, suboptimal. Practice audits have demonstrated that about half of eligible CHF patients are prescribed ACE inhibitors (and fewer still reaching appropriate target doses) and less than one-third of patients with established IHD are prescribed statins (with many fewer reaching recommended cholesterol targets). It is apparent that interventions to improve quality of prescribing are urgently needed. HYPOTHESIS: An intervention that consists of patient-specific one-page evidence summaries, generated and then endorsed by local opinion leaders, will be able to change prescribing practices of community-based primary care physicians. DESIGN: A single centre randomized controlled trial comparing an opinion leader intervention to usual care. Based on random allocation of all physicians in one large Canadian health region, patients with CHF or IHD (not receiving ACE inhibitors or statins, respectively) recruited from community pharmacies will be allocated to intervention or usual care. The primary outcome is improvement in prescription of proven efficacious therapies for CHF (ACE inhibitors) or IHD (statins) within 6 months of the intervention.
EASEGO Study: Doubling of Atorvastatin/Simvastatin or INEGY in Patients With Hypercholesterolemia...
AtherosclerosisIn patients with coronary artery disease and a LDL-C level between 2.5 mmol/L and 5.0 mmol/L on a stable (> 4 weeks) statin starting dose (simvastatin 20 mg or atorvastatin 10 mg), investigate what the LCL-C lowering efficacy is of doubling the statin dose (to 40 mg simvastatin or 20 mg atorvastatin) versus a combination tablet of ezetimibe 10 mg plus simvastatin 20 mg once daily for 12 weeks. It is postulated that more patients reach their LDL-C treatment goal with the combination tablet compared to doubling the starting dose. Furthermore, the effect of both treatment regimens on other lipid parameters, safety and LDL-subfractions will be measured.
Stem Cell Study for Patients With Heart Disease
Chest PainMyocardial Ischemia3 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine if cell therapy with your own cells (autologous cells) delivered with a catheter to regions of the heart with poor blood flow will be safe and if it will relieve your chest pain and/or your ability to exercise.