search

Active clinical trials for "Peripheral Arterial Disease"

Results 901-910 of 1358

Effects of Canola Oil on Blood Vessel Function in Peripheral Arterial Disease

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The fatty acid composition of canola oil will have beneficial acute and chronic effects on vascular function in individuals with peripheral arterial disease.

Completed31 enrollment criteria

OMEGA-3-Polyunsaturated Fatty-Acids (N3-Pufa) In Patients With Peripheral Arterial Disease

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The principal aim of the study is to determine the effects n3-PUFA on top of standard therapy on surrogate markers of disease severity and/or prognosis in patients with PAD. Treatment duration will be 3 months, final follow-up is planned at 6 months after inclusion. Primary outcome parameter is endothelial function assessed by flow-mediated vasodilation using brachial artery ultrasound. Secondary outcome measures comprise maximum and pain-free treadmill walking distance, pulse wave velocity, whole blood viscosity, platelet activation and plasma markers of inflammation.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Motivational Interviewing (MI) for African Americans With Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD) Pilot...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The investigators are conducting a pilot study for a clinical research trial to establish the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and the most effective recruitment strategies prior to the full study.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Electrical Stimulation to Accelerate Wound Healing

DiabetesDiabetic Foot Ulcer2 more

A clinical study at the Baylor College of Medicine, Division of Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy, is being proposed to test the efficacy of a novel electrical stimulation platform named the Tennant Biomodulator designed by AVAZZIA to accelerate wound healing, relieve pain and improve mobility in patients with diabetic foot ulcers.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

Intermittent Negative Pressure to Improve Blood Flow in Patients With Peripheral Artery Disease:...

Peripheral Artery DiseaseIntermittent Claudication1 more

Recent studies have shown that applying intermittent negative pressure (INP) with short negative pressure (-40 mmHg) pulses to the lower extremities increase arterial blood flow velocity and skin blood flow. However, the optimal magnitude of negative pressure to improve blood flow is not known, and needs further investigation. Peripheral arterial blood flow velocity, skin blood flow and skin temperature in the foot will be recorded at different levels of oscillating negative pressure to identify a pressure range which is practically, while at the same time induce clinically relevant changes in blood flow parameters. Heart rate and blood pressure will be recorded to monitor the effects on the central circulation.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Diabetic Artery Obstruction: is it Possible to Reduce Ischemic Events With Cilostazol?

Ischemic StrokePeripheral Artery Disease2 more

Investigation of the clinical efficacy and safety of dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel and cilostazol versus clopidogrel alone in preventing ischemic vascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes and symptomatic peripheral arterial disease.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Drug Eluting Stent for the Management of PERipheral Arterial Disease Of the SFA (DESPERADO-SFA Study)...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

This is a prospective, nonrandomized, single-arm study using the Zilver PTXTM stent in patients with Superficial Femoral Artery (SFA) disease (total occlusions or significant stenosis).

Completed30 enrollment criteria

THE OMEGA-SPM-DOSE and OMEGA-SPM-PAD: Specialized Pro-Resolving Mediators in Patients With Peripheral...

Peripheral Arterial DiseaseClaudication6 more

The purpose of this study is to understand the effects of fish oil supplement (containing parts of omega-3 fatty acids) on inflammation. The investigators are aiming to identify which dose of the fish oil supplement is the most effective. The name of the fish oil supplement is "SPM Emulsion."

Completed24 enrollment criteria

Near-Infrared Spectroscopy-Guided Exercise Training in Peripheral Arterial Disease

Peripheral Arterial Disease

Background: Patients suffering with atherosclerotic peripheral arterial disease (PAD) have limited therapeutic options to improve claudication. Supervised exercise programs are generally effective in improving leg pain from walking, but are poorly adhered to because of patient discomfort. The benefit of exercise training programs is thought to be mediated in part through repeated ischemic stimuli that activate endogenous regenerative mechanisms. In preliminary studies, exercise-induced tissue desaturation by near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) precedes the onset of leg pain. This proposal aims to explore a novel strategy of exercise training in PAD based on measured tissue hypoxia rather than pain symptoms using NIRS to non-invasively characterize muscle oxygen tension. Methods: In subjects with symptomatic peripheral arterial disease, the efficacy of a novel NIRS-based strategy of thrice-weekly exercise training will be assessed. Enrolled subjects will be randomized to NIRS-based training, traditional claudication-based training, or self-directed walking. The hypotheses tested include: 1) NIRS-directed exercise improves claudication to a similar degree as symptom-directed exercise training and 2) is superior to self-directed walking. In the symptom-based group, physical effort will be dictated by claudication symptoms, whereas in the hypoxia-based training program, physical effort is dictated by NIRS measure of calf oxygen tension. Efficacy in the training programs will be evaluated by total walking time on a standard graded treadmill test after 12 weeks. Other measures will be claudication onset time, subjective and objective measures of physical activity, changes in vascular function. In addition, the hypothesis that hypoxia-directed training will result in increased ischemic signaling and increased progenitor cell mobilization to a degree similar as in claudication-based training will be tested. Conclusions: These experiments will test whether a training strategy based on tissue hypoxia (measured by NIRS) is as effective as and more tolerable than traditional symptom-based training programs in PAD. In addition, these experiments will characterize mechanistic responses to hypoxia that may account for clinical improvements that exercise training affords.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Feasibility of Outpatient Care After Manual Compression in Patients Treated for Peripheral Arterial...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

Over the past years, arterial closure systems have tended to replace manual compression to ensure hemostasis at femoral artery puncture points. Arterial closure systems reduce hemostasis and patient immobilization times, thus enabling early resumption of walking. These devices have contributed extensively to the development of outpatient stays for cardiology, vascular and neuro-radiology procedures. According to certain studies however, it would appear that arterial closure devices do not present any greater benefits than manual compression in terms of hemostasis and complications. Moreover, the use of increasingly small diameter instruments would tend to render manual compression sufficient. Finally, the use of these devices generates additional costs. The purpose of our prospective study is to evaluate the feasibility and safety of same-day discharge after manual compression in patients treated for peripheral artery disease by endovascular technique with 5F sheath.

Completed21 enrollment criteria
1...909192...136

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs