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Active clinical trials for "Peripheral Arterial Disease"

Results 401-410 of 1358

Efficiency, Safety and Portability of Neovasculgen

Peripheral Arterial Disease

In 2010, we completed a phase 1 to 2a clinical trial of pCMV-vegf165 in patients with chronic lower limb ischemia (stage 2a to 3 according to Fontaine classification modified by A. V. Pokrovsky) who were not suitable for reconstructive surgery or endovascular treatment. This study demonstrated the safety, feasibility, and short-term(3 months) efficacy of pCMV-vegf165 gene transfer,12,13which lead to conducting a phase 2b to 3 multicenter clinical trial. The study was conducted under the control of the Russian Ministry of Health and was completed in 2011. Patients enrolled in the study were subjected to a 6-month

Completed8 enrollment criteria

PK Study to Evaluate the Effect of PLC on Healthy Chinese Subjects by Multiple-doses

Peripheral Arterial Diseases

The main objective is to evaluate the effect of Propionyl-L-Carnitine Hydrochloride on clinical pharmacokinetic characteristics and its effect of clinical pharmacokinetic characteristics and safety on healthy Chinese subjects to provide a basis for market authorization registration

Completed46 enrollment criteria

Atherectomy By Laser Ablation With Turbo-Elite

Peripheral Arterial DiseasePeripheral Vascular Disease

The primary objective for this study is to prove the safety and effectiveness of the Spectranetics Turbo-Elite catheter in atherectomy treatment for infrainguinal arteries with catheter to vessel sizing of at least 50%.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Effects of Remote Ischemic Preconditioning on Moderate PVD Patients A Pilot Randomized Control Trial...

Peripheral Arterial Diseases

Remote ischemic Preconditioning (RIPC) is a phenomena first observed in cardio-thoracic patients in which exposing the limbs for periods of short intermittent ischemia produces protective effect on heart muscle. The concept was applied to many other parts of the body and the results are positive so far. No human trials on this concept has been conducted in patients with peripheral vascular disease so far but applying the concept for healthy individuals shows vessels dilatation and animal trials shows degree of new vessels formation in addition to reports of symptoms improvement. The trial candidates will be allocated blindly in 4 groups. All groups will have advice about exercise which is the standard practice now. The first group will have supervised exercise. The second group will in addition to the supervised exercise get the ischemic preconditioning with the blood pressure cuff. The third group will get the ischemic preconditioning and the fourth group will get the standard exercise advice. All candidates will have Magnetic Resonance Image Scan (MRA) for their blood vessels in the beginning of the trial and again at the end. The effect of the RIPC (Remote ischemic Preconditioning) and exercises on patient symptoms, new vessel formation and other parameters will be recorded

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Assessing the Feasibility of Including Patients With Peripheral Artery Disease in to an Established...

Peripheral Arterial DiseaseCardiovascular Diseases2 more

This study will investigate if patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) can be successfully incorporated into an already existing Cardiac Rehabilitation programme. One group of PAD patients will exercise as a group, and the other group will exercise alongside patients with coronary artery disease (CAD).

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Belgian Trial Evaluating the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System Recanalization of (Sub)Acute...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The BELTHROM trial investigates the efficacy and safety of the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System recanalization of acute and subacute thrombotic femoropopliteal occlusions (Acute Limb Ischemia (ALI); Rutherford I, IIa, IIb and III). An expected total of 50 patients will be treated. The lesion is located within the femoropopliteal artery (native, in-stent or bypass graft). During the procedure, the device is introduced, activated and slowly advanced into the occlusion to clean out the wall-adherent thrombotic material. If residual underlying stenosis of >30% persists additional endovascular treatment can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Patients will be invited for a follow-up visit at 1 month post-procedure. The primary efficacy endpoint is the technical success of the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System, defined as removal of ≥90% acute clot as documented by angiography. The primary safety endpoint is defined as the absence of device-related complications, which is defined as embolization, perforation or dissection caused by the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System. Secondary endpoints include procedural success, percent clot removed by the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System, clinical success at 1 month follow-up visit, 30-day target lesion revascularization, 30-days serious adverse events and 30-days adverse events.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Influence of Rivaroxaban for Intermittent Claudication and Exercise Tolerance in Patients With Symptomatic...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The aim of the conducted research is to evaluate the protective effect of rivaroxaban (trade name of the Xarelto medicinal product), administered together with acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), in comparison with the effectiveness of using ASA alone, in relation to the distance of claudication and exercise tolerance in patients with PAD over a period of 3 months. At present, COMPASS results show that rivaroxaban vascular dose (2.5 mg twice daily) in combination with ASA (75-100 mg once daily) provides more effective cardiovascular protection (defined as cardiovascular death, vascular, myocardial infarction and stroke) compared to ASA alone. So far, however, no scientific studies have been carried out into account the effect of the drug on the progress of PAD and exercise tolerance in patients.

Not yet recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Self Selected Exercise Intensity in PAD Patients

Peripheral Artery Disease

Although the benefits of supervised walking training in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and symptoms of intermittent claudication (IC) are well established, one of the main problems found in this type of protocol is low adherence to training, which is possibly related to pain during training. In addition, little is known about the impact of performing exercise with pain on cerebral blood flow and cardiovascular health indicators. Thus, the objective of the present study will be to analyze the acute effects of walking exercise with self-selected intensity on the cardiovascular health indicators of patients with PAD. Therefore, 17 patients with PAD will undergo three experimental sessions: exercise with self-selected intensity, exercise until maximum pain and control. The responses of the cardiovascular variables (heart rate variability, blood pressure, heart rate, arterial stiffness and endothelial function) will be obtained before and after the sessions. In addition, during the session cardiovascular responses (cerebral blood flow, blood pressure and heart rate), perceptual and affective responses, as well as information about the exercises performed during the session will be obtained. The responses before and after exercise will be analyzed using the two-way analysis of variance for repeated measures (ANOVA) and the Newman-Keuls post-hoc test. The value of P <0.05 will be considered significant.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Effect of a Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation Program on Walking Capacity in Peripheral Artery...

Arteriopathy

Lower extremity peripheral arterial disease (LEPAD) is a highly prevalent chronic disease. Cardiovascular mortality of LEPAD patients at five years ranges between 18 to 30%. LEPAD is primarily caused by atherosclerosis that induces an inadequate blood flow to meet the tissues demand due to the narrowing of the arteries. An aggravation of the arterial lesions in LEPAD patients induces a worsening of patients' symptoms and a severe limitation of their walking capacity, contributing to an impairment of their quality of life. Interventions designed to improve walking impairment may have a significant impact on the functional capacity in LEPAD patients. Lower extremity electrical stimulation is an older technique that relies on different types of electrical stimulations with different expected physiological effects on hemodynamics, skeletal muscle functions or pain pathway. The aim of the ELECTRO-PAD study is to assess the effect of a 12 weeks program of neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) on the absolute walking distance (AWD) measured during a treadmill test in peripheral artery disease patients.

Completed53 enrollment criteria

Comparative Pharmacokinetic Study Between Two Extended-Release Cilostazol Formulations in Korea...

Peripheral Artery Disease

This is a randomized, open-label, multiple-dose, two-sequence, two-period crossover study to to compare the safety/tolerability and pharmacokinetics between Pletaal SR Cap. and Cilostan CR Tab. in healthy volunteers

Completed12 enrollment criteria
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