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Active clinical trials for "Death, Sudden, Cardiac"

Results 161-170 of 257

Anxiety and Vagal Control of the Heart in Coronary Disease

Cardiovascular DiseasesCoronary Disease6 more

To examine the role of reduced vagal control of heart rate in the increased risk of cardiac mortality associated with anxiety in a population with established coronary artery disease (CAD). A second objective is to determine whether the effects of anxiety are independent of the effects of depression.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Identifying High Risk Patients With Syncope

Cardiovascular DiseasesArrhythmia5 more

To validate two models which categorized patients with syncope into high and low risk for either sudden death or diagnostic arrhythmias based on data available from the initial history, physical examination, and electrocardiogram.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Incidence of Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease in Mexican Americans

Cardiovascular DiseasesHeart Diseases11 more

To determine the incidence of type II diabetes and cardiovascular disease among Mexican-American and non-Hispanic whites in a 15 to 24 year follow-up of the San Antonio Heart Study 1 participants. Also, to perform a 15 to 24 year mortality follow-up of the cohort and to examine the "Hispanic paradox".

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Performance of Professional Rescuers With a New Defibrillation Algorithm...

Cardiac ArrestSudden3 more

In the Paris (France) Medical Emergency system, in the early phase of Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA), the treatment of a Ventricular Fibrillation (VF) consists of delivering an External Electric Shock (EES) by a rescuer with the use of an Automated External Defibrillator (AED). This latter realizes a cardiac rhythm analysis every two minutes. This analysis requires that chest compressions (CC) be interrupted for a while. However, CC interruptions are potentially harmful due to the brain, and heart perfusions decrease. On the other hand, the recurrence of VF occurs mostly during the first minute after the shock, whereas the delay between 2 rhythm analysis is 2 minutes. The consequence is excessive time spent in VF, which is deleterious in terms of coronary and cerebral perfusion. The investigator implements a new AED algorithm whose operating principle is as follows. One minute after an EES administration, the AED realizes a cardiac rhythm analysis during which the rescuers do not need to interrupt the chest compressions (CC): this is called the rhythm analysis " in presence of CC" The detection of a VF " in presence of CC " needs to be confirmed, " in absence of CC " The CC's are therefore interrupted for new rhythm analysis. Once the presence of VF is approved, the AED proposes a shock to be administred The aim of the study Study Design: This is a prospective observational study. The eligibility criteria are as follows: Patients in Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. Basic Life support care with an AED. The primary endpoint is the " chest-compression fraction (CCF) " that represents the CPR-time performance during the ten first minutes of BLS care ( or < 10 min in case of Return Of Spontaneus Circulation (ROSC))

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Psychological Sequelae After Sudden Cardiac Death in the Patient and His Relatives

Post Traumatic Stress DisorderResuscitated Sudden Cardiac Death

This study will evaluate and describe the occurrence of Acute traumatic stress and persistence of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) after resuscitated sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patient and relatives present during the event. The population will be composed of 40 patients: 20 with resuscitated SCD and 20 relatives. Two interviews will be performed by a psychologist within one week after resuscitated SCD and at month 3. Questionnaire Stanford Acute Stress Reaction Questionnaire (SASRQ), Life Events Checklist for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) (LEC-5) and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5) will be filled during these interviews.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

CIQTP Prolongation : Role and Mechanism in Sudden Cardiac Death

Sudden Cardiac Death

Despite major progress in molecular and phenotypic characterization of primary electrical disorders, many (aborted) sudden cardiac deaths (SCD) occur in young victims without identifiable abnormalities. Investigator recently identified, in 4 families presenting unexplained SCD, a new arrhythmia entity (catecholamine-induced QT prolongation; CIQTP) characterized by normal QT duration at rest but major QT lengthening during mental stress test (MST). Investigators aim to determine the prevalence of this new phenotype in unexplained SCD and identify its underlying pathophysiological mechanism. More specifically, investigators aim to: determine the prevalence of CIQTP in unexplained SCD and identify new affected families; identify the role of mental stress in QT prolongation; identify the genetics basis underlying this life threatening disease; perform transcriptomic and electrophysiological profiling of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CM) from CIQTP patients to identify putative biomarkers and pathophysiological mechanisms. MST will be performed, additionally to the conventional screening, in families affected by unexplained SCD or long QT syndrome (LQTS) referred to university hospitals of Nantes, Rennes, Tours and Brest. Relevance of the MST on the different type of LQTS will be evaluated and compared to conventional provocative tests (epinephrine, exercise). Whole-genome sequencing will first be performed in 3 distantly affected relatives within each of the 4 largest families identified. As previously performed in Nantes, analysis of the shared rare variants will allow identifying gene(s) associated with the disease. Transcriptomic (high-throughput 3' Digital Gene Expression mRNA sequencing) and electrophysiological (96-well automated optical recordings of action potentials and patch-clamp recordings of ionic currents, using specific ion channel activators and inhibitors) profiling will be performed on iPSC-CMs from 2 affected and one unaffected first-degree relatives of these 4 large families.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Stress ECG Test for the Evaluation of the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death in a Paediatric Cohort With...

Wolff-Parkinson-White SyndromeSudden Cardiac Death1 more

Patients with preexcitation are at risk for sudden cardiac death. The pathogenesis is a rapid antegrade conduction of atrial fibrillation over the accessory pathway to the ventricle resulting in ventricular fibrillation. Today it is possible to eliminate the conduction over the accessory pathway by catheter intervention (radiofrequency ablation) with a low rate of complications and a high rate of success. In clinical practice it is therefore important to estimate the risk for sudden cardiac death in an individual patient to give an advice to the patient and the parents about the further evaluation and therapeutic strategy. The velocity of the conduction over the accessory pathway can be estimated by analysing the ECG during sinus tachycardia. If the preexcitation disappears at a relatively low heart rate, the risk for sudden death is less than in patients with persisting preexcitation at the maximal heart rate. Compared to the gold standard i.e. measurement of the refractory period of the accessory pathway during invasive electrophysiological study (EPS), the measurements at the stress ECG have been reported to be a relatively poor indicator for an elevated risk which may be explained by a high intraindividual variability of this test. This study is designed to define the clinical relevance of the stress ECG in paediatric patients with preexcitation (compared to the invasive electrophysiological study). First Hypothesis: The results of the 3 stress ECG-tests are reproducible in an individual patient. Null hypothesis: there is no difference between the three measurements of cycle length during stress ECG. Alternate hypothesis: the difference between the three measurements of cycle length is > 10%. Second Hypothesis: There is a close correlation between the results at stress ECG and the results at the invasive electrophysiological Intervention.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Assessment of Primary Prevention Patients Receiving An ICD - Systematic Evaluation of ATP

Sudden Cardiac Death

The primary objective is to understand the role of antitachycardia pacing (ATP) in primary prevention patients indicated for ICD therapy and programmed according to current guidance of higher rate cut-offs and therapy delays. The time to first all-cause shock will be tested in subjects with standard therapy (ATP and shocks) compared to subjects programmed to shock only to assess equivalency.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Prognostic Value of Ventricular Fibrillation Spectral Analysis in Sudden Cardiac Death

Sudden Cardiac DeathVentricular Fibrillation1 more

Ventricular fibrillation (VF)-related sudden cardiac death (SCD) is a leading cause of mortality. Patients may survive with neurological damage despite state-of-the-art treatment. Current biological and imaging parameters show significant limitations on early predicting cerebral performance at hospital admission. A spectral-based model was recently suggested to correlate time-dependent VF spectral changes with acute cerebral injury in comatose survivors after cardiac arrest, which opens the possibility to implement early prognostic tools in clinical practice. The AWAKE trial is an investigator-initiated, multicenter, observational trial aiming to validate a spectral-based model to early predict cerebral performance and survival in resuscitated comatose survivors admitted to specialized intensive care units. The primary clinical outcome is favorable neurological performance (FNP) during hospitalization. Patients will be categorized into 4 subsets of NP according to the risk score obtained from the predictive model. The secondary clinical outcomes are survival to hospital discharge, and FNP and survival after 6 months of follow-up. Model-derived categorization will be compared with clinical outcomes to assess model sensitivity, specificity and accuracy. Eligible patients will be included prospectively and retrospectively, using an electronic Case Report Form to enter data from medical records and in-person interviews. Patients will be divided into: study group (predictive data required) including comatose (Glasgow Coma Scale -GCS- ≤8) survivors undergoing temperature control after return of spontaneous circulation (RoSC), and control group including patients who regain consciousness (GCS=15) after RoSC. VF tracings prior to the first DC shock will be digitized and analyzed to derive spectral data and risk scores.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Genetic Risk Assessment of Defibrillator Events

Sudden Cardiac DeathArrhythmias2 more

Arrhythmias remain a major health problem, causing at least 250,000 deaths annually in the United States. Pharmacological treatments often do more harm than good, and device therapies are limited by high cost and effects on quality of life. Ion channel mutations cause rare inherited arrhythmopathies, but account for only a small fraction of patients with life- threatening arrhythmias and sudden death. Most arrhythmias occur during myocardial ischemia, following myocardial infarction, and in patients with poor left ventricular (LV) function of any etiology. Aside from ejection fraction (EF), few clinically useful indicators to stratify the risk of sudden death have been identified. The role of subtle difference in ion channel expression and/or structure in predisposing patients to arrhythmias and modulating the risk of sudden death is unknown. In this study, we are prospectively testing whether polymorphisms in ion channels and ion channel modifying genes are associated with arrhythmias in a population with internal cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) and poor LV function. We will test the hypothesis that functional polymorphisms in the coding sequences and promoter regions of cardiac genes (e.g. ion channels, beta-adrenergic receptors) predispose individuals to arrhythmias and /or heart failure progression. We hope to identify genetic predictors for the common forms of sudden cardiac death. This would allow the identification of a subpopulation of heart failure patients that would benefit most from ICD placement.

Completed8 enrollment criteria
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