View clinical trials related to Acute Coronary Syndrome.
Filter by:The investigators are interested in determining if there is a meaningful difference between two of the most commonly used medications used to improve the pumping function of the heart among critically ill patients admitted to the Coronary Care Unit (CCU) at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI). To do this, the investigators will randomly assign patients who are felt to require use of these medications by their treating physicians to one of the two most commonly used agents in Canada: Milrinone or Dobutamine. Each patient will be closely monitored by their healthcare team, and their medication will be adjusted based on each patient's clinical status. Information from blood work (e.g. kidney and liver function, complete blood counts, and other markers of how effectively blood is circulating in the body), assessment of end-organ function (e.g. urine output, mentation), abnormal heart rhythms noted on monitoring and results of imaging studies (e.g. angiogram, echocardiograms.) will be collected for analysis. All patients will be followed for the duration of their hospital stay at UOHI.
Background Troponin are proteins found in the cardiomyocyte and are a cornerstone in the diagnoses of acute myocardial infarction. Troponin is released to the bloodstream as a result of an cardiomyocyte injury. Troponin is frequently assessed in hospital care for patients with chest pain and dyspnea. Guidelines recommend troponin assessment at admission and repeated at 3 to 6 hours, depending on the assay. High-sensitivity assays measure concentrations that are ten-times lower than earlier generations of assays. However, the time from when troponin is elevated in the bloodstream after an ischemic injury, measured with high-sensitivity assays, are not fully known. During an X-ray imaging of the heart's blood vessels (coronary angiogram) it is possible to do a short, controlled occlusion of coronary artery by inflating a small balloon in one of the coronary arteries. Numerous earlier studies in patients have used this method for induced occlusion of one coronary artery for 1 to 3 minutes. Only one of the studies measured troponin I. The aim with this study is to quantify and compare the release of troponin T and troponin I in the early hours after a controlled induced ischemia. Study Design This is a prospective, descriptive and experimental study. There will be included 40 patients, without acute ischemic cardiac disease. They will be randomized in 4 groups. 0: 10 patients - control group, no balloon occlusion 1. 10 patients - balloon occlusion for 30 seconds 2. 10 patients - balloon occlusion for 60 seconds 3. 10 patients - balloon occlusion for 90 seconds Subsequently there will be assessed serial blood samples 0 - 3 hours: Every 15 minutes 3 - 6 hours: Every 30 minutes Statistics This is a pilot study and it is estimated that ten patients are sufficient number of patients in each group to assess elevation of troponin after occlusion of coronary artery. The thesis is there is a dosage-response correlation between the length of balloon occlusion and the concentration of troponin in blood stream.
Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) guidelines have been changed, favoring dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) with the more potent P2Y12 inhibitor ticagrelor over clopidogrel (besides aspirin). This change is based on studies that showed benefits of ticagrelor. However, study participants were only partly treated by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). In patients who were treated by PCI, this was generally performed using of bare metal or first-generation drug-eluting stents (DES). CHANGE DAPT is an investigator-initiated, prospective, single centre registry, in which we evaluate the impact of the guideline suggested change in the primary DAPT regimen (from clopidogrel to ticagrelor) on 1-year clinical outcome in ACS patients treated by PCI with newer-generation DES in the Thoraxcentrum Twente.
The investigators want to assess the use of the residual SYNTAX score and the SYNTAX Revascularization Index as predictors for in-hospital outcomes and mid-term (6 months to 1 year) outcomes in patients with multi-vessel disease (MVD) who undergo PCI in the setting of STEMI or NSTEACS. Both values will be calculated in a number of patients over one year, and the relationship between both values and patient outcomes will be evaluated.
Telemedically supported paramedic care of acute coronary syndromes was compared to a historical control period of solely conventional on-scene physician care. Quality outcomes based on current guidelines were researched als well as time requirements in both groups.
Ticagrelor 90 mg twice daily treatment is recommended for 12 months in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and in patients undergoing coronary revascularization and conservative strategies. Recent data from the PEGASUS-TIMI 541 trial have shown that long-term treatment with ticagrelor reduced the risk of major cardiovascular adverse events (MACE) in stable ambulatory patients with a history of myocardial infarction. Based on these data, prolongation over 12 months of ticagrelor therapy could be indicated in selected patients; even if with such a prolongation some adverse effects on the treatment could be observed. In the PLATO2 trial, where median duration of exposure to the study drug was 277 days, the suspension of ticagrelor therapy was 7.4% in ticagrelor versus 6% in patients receiving clopidogrel ( P <0.001). Ticagrelor treatment interruption was mainly driven by non-serious adverse events occurring mainly shortly after randomization. For patients after the first year of treatment, the subsequent rate of interruption was low. These data demonstrate that adverse events considered "not serious" by traditional trial criteria may have an effect on quality of life and, therefore, can cause treatment interruption; The phenomenon emphasizes at the same time the importance of patient education and advice on timing and the nature of adverse effects in order to improve adherence. Patients in the real world may show a premature suspension rate of the drug even higher than in clinical trials. However, data from real-world patients is scarce.
The aim of this study is to determine efficacy and safety of polyprenols (ROPREN) using in patients with acute coronary syndrome
During acute coronary syndrome, the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association recommend oxygen delivery to patients with less than 90% oxygen saturation. Oxygen therapy in these patients for a duration of at least 6 hours, but also stipulates that it is reasonable to administer oxygen to all acute coronary syndrome patients during the first six hours following the presentation. Hyperoxia also has well-established risks. Our research hypotheses are: (I) that current practices tend to use high oxygen flows resulting in high SpO2 levels during acute coronary syndrome. (II) there is a high rate of desaturation in patients with acute coronary syndrome and an automatic adaptation of oxygen flows may reduce this frequency. (III) that excessive oxygenation targets have no advantage. Our hypothesis is that maintaining a SpO2 of 90 to 94% is at least equivalent when compared to higher saturation objectives (SpO2 of 94 to 100%) with regard to the occurrence of complications in the patient in acute coronary syndrome . We will use two SpO2 targets with the FreeO2 system, 92 and 97%.
This is a randomized controlled pilot trial in approximately 50 acute coronary syndrome patients to determine if a 12 week, telephone-delivered, combined positive psychology-motivational interviewing intervention is feasible and more effective than a motivational interviewing health education program at improving health behaviors and other outcomes. The investigators hypothesize that the intervention will be associated with better mental and physical health outcomes and better health behavior adherence compared to the motivational interviewing health education program.
The investigators will complete a pragmatic randomized trial (N=260 randomized participants) of the 26-week blended collaborative care (CC) intervention compared to enhanced usual care (eUC) in patients admitted for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or heart failure (HF) found to have current depression, generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), or panic disorder (PD). The CC intervention will use a novel three-pronged approach to these high-risk patients. Care managers will provide centralized care coordination and specific interventions targeting: (1) the psychiatric disorders, (2) cardiac health behaviors, and (3) the cardiac illness. The primary study outcome will be physical function at 26 weeks, measured by the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI), given links between function and new cardiac events. The investigators will also examine effects on numerous other outcomes important to patients and healthcare systems. Specific Aim 1 [patient-centered outcomes-primary aim]: To compare between-group differences in the CC and eUC conditions on improvements in physical function, health-related quality of life, mental health, patient satisfaction, and other key patient-reported outcomes at 26 and 52 weeks. Specific Aim 2 [adherence and medical outcomes]: To compare between-group differences on health behaviors (physical activity, diet, smoking, medication adherence) and major adverse cardiac events. Specific Aim 3 [cost]: To compare healthcare costs between groups and assess the cost-effectiveness of CC. Hypotheses: The investigators expect this bolstered CC program to be associated with superior improvements in physical function, health-related quality of life, patient satisfaction, and adherence at 26 weeks, with promising effects on major adverse cardiac events. The investigators likewise expect the intervention to be cost-effective (<$10,000/quality-adjusted life year) over the study period.