View clinical trials related to Coronary Artery Disease.
Filter by:NEAT is an observational cohort (Prospective registry of real world data) of patients with coronary and peripheral artery disease in an outopatient setting.
The ICRR is a health services registry to establish the quality of CR delivery, and the effectiveness in terms of patient outcomes, in low-resource settings. The purposes of the registry are care optimization, evidentiary support for CR advocacy / policy, and research. All programs in low-resource settings will be welcome to participate at no cost. Programs will follow procedures approved by their local ethics board for collection of program and patient-reported variables. Assessments occur pre-cardiac rehabilitation (CR), post-CR and annually thereafter.
Patients with coronary artery disease, especially after PCI, require long-term oral antiplatelet therapy. However, this patient population may inevitably require non-cardiac surgery for a variety of conditions. In order to avoid the occurrence of bleeding events, oral antiplatelet agents are usually discontinued before non-cardiac surgery in patients with coronary artery disease, which may increase the incidence of ischemic events. Therefore, it is important to provide patients with the optimal perioperative antithrombotic treatment to balance the risk of bleeding and ischemia.
The investigators hypothesize that preventive VT substrate ablation in patients with chronic ICM, previously selected based on imaging criteria (BZC mass) for their likely high arrhythmic risk, is safe and effective in preventing clinical VT events.
Hypothesis: the clinical outcome of patients with indication of PCI and coronary stent implantation that are at high risk of events can be improved with a widespread use of intra-coronary tools that allow a PCI optimization (i.e. functional assessment by pressure guidewire and intra-coronary imaging techniques). Objective: to evaluate whether the use of pressure guidewire and intra-coronary imaging techniques (mainly optimal coherence tomography) in patients at high risk of events undergoing coronary angiography for myocardial revascularization is associated with an improved clinical outcome in comparison with patient with angiographic alone guided cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting coronary stenting. Methods: Prospective observational multicentric international study with a follow-up of 12 months, including 1.000 patients in 40 sites located in 3 European countries (Spain, France, and Portugal). The control group will be comprised by a similar number of matched patients included in the "extended-risk" cohort of the XIENCE V USA study. PCI will be performed following local standard protocols and accordingly to the physician criteria. The use of pressure guidewire will be recommended according to the current guidelines, in patients with angiographically intermediate lesions and in those with multivessel disease. The use of OCT will be strongly recommended, as patients included will be considered to be at high risk of events, accordingly to the current recommendations. The primary endpoint will be target lesion failure (TLF) at 1 year.
The iCorMicA study is a multicentre, prospective, randomised, double-blind, sham-controlled, parallel-group, end-point trial and registry. The investigators seek to determine whether stratified medical therapy guided by an adjunctive interventional diagnostic procedure (IDP) during the invasive management of patients with known or suspected angina but no obstructive coronary artery disease improves symptoms, wellbeing, cardiovascular risk and clinical outcomes.
Vortex - First in Human study to evaluate the feasibility, safety, clinical and technical success of the Vortex temporary percutaneous, transvalvular circulatory support system (Vortex System)
This study is assessing the impact of timing of PD assessments on measures of platelet reactivity in patients undergoing PCI treated with cangrelor.
Cangrelor is an intravenous P2Y12 inhibitor utilized as a bridge to achieve adequate platelet inhibition until oral P2Y12 inhibitors achieve their full antiplatelet effects in patients undergoing coronary stenting. Although in this setting the potent oral P2Y12 inhibitor prasugrel is commonly utilized, there is very limited data on the optimal approach for switching between these therapies. The overarching aim of this investigation is to rule out a drug drug interaction (DDI) when cangrelor and prasugrel are concomitantly administered in patients undergoing coronary stenting.
Large population cross sectional study between 2019-2020 for 4207 new patients that refer to professor Kojuri cardiovascular clinic in shiraz, Iran, was conducted. Patients were undergone selective coronary angiography from radial artery approach by an expert interventional cardiologist. ABI were measured for all patients. ABI ratio was compared with the results of coronary angiography for patients who underwent coronary angiography to measure specificity and sensitivity.