View clinical trials related to Aortic Valve Stenosis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and performance of the HLT System in patients with severe aortic stenosis who present at High Risk for aortic valve replacement surgery.
Evaluation of a strategy of selected revascularization guided on myocardial ischemia detection after the TAVI procedure by using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) myocardial perfusion imaging.
The management of symptomatic patients with moderate Aortic Stenosis (AS) remains challenging and tests that would give more definitive answers are needed. The value of increase in Aortic Valve mean Gradient (AVMG), lack of change in Aortic Valve area (AVA) and calculation of valve compliance/resistance during stress echo (SE) in the symptomatic moderate AS population prognostication has to the investigators knowledge not been examined before. Similarly the additive value of myocardial blood flow reserve (MBFR), Computed Tomography (CT) calcium score, speckle tracking echocardiography, carotid ultrasonography, and N-Terminal pro B- type natriuretic peptide B (NT-proBNP) in the prognostication of this population group especially in combination with SE remains unclear.
This study proposes to perform a descriptive analysis and pilot observational study looking at the types and quantity of anesthetic agents used and their associations with outcomes among patients scheduled to receive transfemoral aortic valve replacements (TAVR) at Yale New Haven Hospital (YNHH).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a left ventricular rapid pacing using the valve delivery guide-wire in transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) reduces the overall procedure duration in comparison with the conventional method.
During Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) procedure, a new valve is implanted. The valve can be CoreValve (Medtronic Company) or Edward SAPIENS (Edwards Company). All TAVI patients require a temporary pacemaker(PMK), which is usually performed by insertion of a standard temporary electrode through the femoral vein. The temporary PMK is associated with a small but significant rate of complications. The PMK is usually removed immediately at the end of the TAVI procedure, only when using the Edward SAPIENS valve. The CoreValve valve is more associated with conduction complications, and thus the PMK is later removed in these cases. PMK Complications seen include: - Right Ventricle perforation by temporary electrode, leading to Pericardial bleeding, in some cases with Tamponade - Infection - Electrode dislocation causing In-effective pacing (and/or sensing) - Prolonged bed rest - Prolonged hospitalization - Access related problems (hematoma, pneumothorax) In a review of a large cohort (1) of patients from Milan (JACC 2012) the rate of tamponade was 4.3% most of which was associated with the temporary PMK.
The aim of this pilot study is to establish whether a Supervised TAVR Exercise Program (STEP) can safely improve the frailty status in patients with symptomatic severe aortic valve stenosis prior to undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR).
Prior to the deployment of transcatheter heart valves (THV), balloon aortic valvuloplasty (BAV) is often performed under rapid right ventricular pacing (burst >180 bpm) with the induction of a functional cardiac arrest for up to 30 seconds. Aortic valve predilation aims at facilitating the crossing of the aortic annulus, accurate valve positioning and does also provide information on the anatomy of the valve complex. However, BAV has been shown to have a number of potentially detrimental effects. There is limited experience for the balloon expandable Edwards THV on the need for predilation (BAV). Experience so far has only been documented from smaller, uncontrolled case series. The investigators aim to document the incidence of several kinds of complications in a large, multicenter registry / prospective controlled cohort study to identify associations between patient related variables and outcomes.
The Medtronic Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implant System (CoreValve System Family) has been demonstrated to be safe and effective for high through extreme risk patients with symptomatic severe native aortic stenosis or a stenosed, insufficient, or combined surgical bioprosthetic valve failure. Per DCGI systematic post marketing surveillance requirement, the purpose of this PMS plan is to provide local post marketing surveillance data regarding the safety of Medtronic CoreValve System Family
EARTH-TAVR is a diagnostic multicenter study to evaluate the occurrence and extent of cerebral embolization (total new lesion volume) in patients before TAVR versus 3 months after TAVR.