View clinical trials related to Coronary Artery Disease.
Filter by:Patients in this prospective cohort study were selected if they had a history of PCI more than 1 year previously. 405 patients were divided based on their preferences to fasting and non fasting and after 1 month of fasting major adverse cardiovascular events were measured
This is a multi-center, observational cohort study including patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and ≥1 saphenous vein grafts (SVG) presenting with recurrent ischemic symptoms. Objective: to investigate the clinical outcomes in patients with prior CABG evaluated for bypass graft failure and progression of native coronary artery disease (CAD). Follow-up will be collected through national registry databases, electronic medical patient records and standardized telephonic assessment at 3 and 5 years follow-up.
The aim of this study is to evaluate functional and physical capacity, health-related quality of life and associations with frailty in older patients after ischemic heart disease and interventional treatment with an individualized physical training program in the second phase of cardiac rehabilitation.
Flaxseed and olive oil consumption have beneficial effects on cardiovascular risk factors. Nonetheless the effects of their simultaneous consumption have not yet been studied.The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of a healthy diet containing flaxseed and olive oil compared with healthy dietary advice on cardiovascular disease risk markers in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), in improving flow-mediated dilation, plasma lipid profile and fatty acids composition of red blood cells.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Genoss® DCB by demonstrating non-inferiority in patients with in-stent restenosis (ISR) compared with a product of the same category (Sequent® Please NEO). The experimental group was treated with Genoss® DCB, and the control group was treated with SeQuent® Please NEO. In this study, the end point of 9 months after procedure was used as the main endpoint to evaluate the efficacy of Paclitaxel coated PTCA balloon catheter. The safety of the catheter was evaluated by cardiovascular adverse events.
Drug-coated balloon is being used more and more widely for the advantage of intervention without implantation. But the balloon needs to be released long enough to be effective. Prolonged balloon dilation resulting in the cessation of blood flow in the distal vessels, especially large vessels, may result in severe ischemia in the patient. RIPC can enhance patients' tolerance to ischemic events, so we believe that RIPC application before the use of drug balloon for PCI can improve patients' ischemic symptoms, thus increasing the release time of drug balloon and improving the effect.
The present study aims to evaluate the strict application of the 2018 European Society of Cardiology guidelines on myocardial revascularization, that recommends to check renal function if patients have taken metformin immediately before angiography and withhold metformin if renal function deteriorates. The aim of this study is to assess the safety of metformin in diabetic patients undergoing coronary angiography in terms of risk of lactic acidosis and to individuate eventual predictors of augmented lactate after coronary angiography.
Rationale: Two-thirds of intracoronary thrombi causing acute coronary syndrome (ACS) result from rupture of lipid-rich plaques (LRP). After treatment of the culprit lesion in ACS patients, additional LRPs are found in approximately 50% of patients. Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) combined with intracoronary ultrasound (IVUS) can identify these vulnerable plaques during coronary angiography (CAG) and is able to assess plaque characteristics and the lipid-core burden index in a 4mm segment (LCBImm4). It is currently unknown whether treatment of LRPs leads to plaque stabilization, potentially reducing the number of subsequent ACS. We hypothesize that LRPs can be treated with balloons coated with an antiproliferative drug (i.e. drug-eluting balloons; DEB) to deliver selective pharmacotherapeutic treatment to halt the local atherosclerotic process and subsequently reduce the risk for atherosclerotic events. Objectives: To determine the change in plaque characteristics of non-culprit LRPs, as measured with IVUS/NIRS, after treatment with DEB in patients with ACS. Study design: Prospective single-arm clinical trial Study population: Patients with non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndromes Intervention: If a LRP is detected with IVUS/NIRS, it will be treated with DEB. In case multiple LRPs are detected, only one will be treated. Main study endpoints: The difference in LCBImm4 between baseline and 9 months of plaques treated with DEB.
The study aim is to compare the effects produced by two different exercise training modalities on atrial function evaluated by speckle-tracking echocardiography on hypertensive patients with coronary artery disease. 50 males patients will be randomized to interval training or combined training the latter including both aerobic and resistance exercises. The training period will last 12 weeks. The protocol will provide two different assessment of atrial function: -acute: after a single session of exercise; - 12 weeks: at the end of exercise training protocols.
The purpose of this study is to assess if using the Impella® CP (or Impella® 2.5) device during high-risk PCI in patients with reduced left-sided heart function will result in an improvement in symptoms, heart function and health after a heart procedure compared to the current standard of care.