View clinical trials related to Coronary Artery Disease.
Filter by:Quantitative Flow Ratio (QFR) is a novel method for evaluating the functional significance of coronary stenosis. QFR is estimated based on two angiographic projections. Studies have shown a good correlation with the present wire-based standard approach Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) for assessment of intermediate coronary stenosis. The purpose of the FAVOR III Europe Japan study is to investigate if a QFR-based diagnostic strategy will results in non-inferior clinical outcome after 12 months compared to a standard pressure-wire guided strategy in evaluation of patients with chest pain (stable angina pectoris) and intermediate coronary stenosis.
This study aims to investigate the clinical effect of the new saphenous vein harvesting technique "No-touch" in off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting(OPCABG), comparing to the conventional technique. Adopting CTA to evaluate the 3 months patency of the graft, we will compare veins harvested using No-touch technique to saphenous veins using conventional open technique.
In patients after myocardial infarction (MI) (heart attacks) and treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), the current standard is dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT), with aspirin and a P2Y12 receptor inhibitor, for 1 year of treatment. At 1 year, there are several options including: i) Ongoing DAPT (with aspirin and ticagrelor), ii) Selective treatment use of a P2Y12 inhibitor based on risk profiles. This study is a pilot vanguard study to evaluate several strategies for choosing anti-platelet regimen among patients post MI and PCI at 1 year.
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the leading cause of death worldwide. Dietary patterns and functional foods may play an important role in the management of cardiovascular risk factors such as overweight and dyslipidemia, as well as inflammation and oxidative stress. However, little is known regarding the effect of diets or specific nutrients on these parameters in individuals with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The Brazilian Cardioprotective Diet (DicaBr) is based on Brazilian nutritional guidelines and also in a unique and ludic nutritional strategy. In a pilot study, this diet was effective in reducing blood pressure (intragroup comparison) and body weight (intergroup comparison) in individuals with established cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, the effectiveness of this dietary pattern supplemented with different kind of nuts is unknown. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of the DicaBr supplemented or not with 30g/day of different nuts on cardiometabolic parameters in patients with recent AMI. In this parallel randomized controlled trial, 388 patients ≥40 years with a recent diagnosis of AMI (60 to 180 days) will be allocated to one of two study groups: 1) DicaBr group (DCB, control group); or 2) DicaBr group supplemented with mixed nuts (DCBN, intervention group). All patients will receive the same dietary prescription, the DCBN group also will receive 30g/day of nuts (10g of peanuts, 10g of cashew nuts and 10g of Brazilian nuts). A pilot study including 100 individuals who will receive only peanuts (30g/day) will be conducted. The primary outcome will be LDL-cholesterol (LDL-c) levels after 16 weeks. In the baseline and at the end of the study (16 weeks), lipid and glycemic profile and anthropometric indexes will be evaluated in both groups; inflammatory and oxidative stress markers, and adipokines will be evaluated in a subsample. It is expected that DicaBr supplemented with nuts will be superior to DicaBr alone to benefit patients with AMI regarding cardiometabolic parameters.
To place two different everolimus-eluting stents (EES), a bioabsorbable polymer EES (Synergy®) and a permanent-type polymer EES (Xience®), randomly to the ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and to observe and compare the early and chronic vascular responses using the frequency domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT). The primary endpoint is the 2-week strut coverage rate by FD-OCT.
Remote ischemic conditioning(RIC) is a protective systemic strategy by organs brief and sublethal ischemia to confer protection from subsequent severe ischemia in distant organs, especially for heart and brain. This study will discuss whether RIC can play a part in preventing the patients with coexistence of cerebral and coronary atherosclerosis from the recurrence of cerebral vascular disease(CVD) or coronary artery disease(CAD). This study selects patients who suffered an ischemic stroke within 14 days prior to enrollment. All patients complete cerebral and coronary artery assessment. And then the the investigators select the patients who both have at least one cerebral vascular and at least one coronary artery stenosis over 50%, or the patients who both have at least one cerebral vascular stenosis over 50% and myocardial ischemic events history. These patients will randomly divide into two groups, RIC group and non-RIC group. Non-RIC group will only accept cardio-cerebrovascular disease secondary prevention treatment. RIC group will use not only cardio-cerebrovascular disease secondary prevention treatment, but also RIC everyday for three months, 5 cycles 5min ischemic-5min reperfusion each day. For the first month, the the investigators will call RIC group patients every week for insuring compliance and adverse effect. All patients will follow up endpoint events, cardio-cerebrovascular disease secondary prevention treatment, and the adverse effect every three months, up to one year.
A prospective, active control, open-label, multinational, randomized clinical trial comparing single long BioMime™ Morph Coronary Stent System vs. two overlapping Xience family Coronary Stent Systems to evaluate safety and performance in approximately 200 patients with long de novo lesions will be randomly enrolled in a 2:1 ratio [BioMime™ Morph (n=133) vs. XIENCE family (n=67)]. The study population should include patients with symptomatic ischemic heart disease due to de novo lesions (lengths ≥26 mm and ≤56 mm irrespective of number of lesions) in native coronary arteries with a reference vessel diameter of (proximal to distal) 2.75 - 2.25 mm, 3.00 - 2.50 mm and 3.5 - 3.00 mm in patients eligible for Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA) and stenting procedures. All patients must meet all the study inclusion / exclusion criteria before enrolment in the study. All subjects shall accept clinical follow up at 1 month, 6 months, 12 months, 24 months post procedure. 10% of the patients [(2:1) BioMime™ Morph (13) vs. Xience (7)] will be assessed for OCT analysis from pre-designated site(s) and based on availability of OCT console at the site and Patient's consent. [Time Frame: Post-procedure and 6 months (±14 days)]
The expression and quantification of Micro-RNA 146-a, was analyzed in the subgingival plaque samples of generalized chronic periodontitis patients with and without coronary heart disease. The demographic variables and periodontal parameters were assessed and correlated with expression of micro-RNA 146-a. The quantification of levels of micro-RNA 146-a was done using Real time Polymerase chain reaction. ( RT-PCR)
This study evaluates the efficacy and safety of Edoxaban with the combination of edoxaban and antiplatelet in patients with stable CAD (coronary artery stenosis ≥50% on medical treatment or revascularized stable CAD [≥ 12 months for acute coronary syndrome and ≥ 6 months after stable CAD]) and high-risk atrial fibrillation (CHA2DS2-VASc score ≥2).
Recent studies indicate that anti-factor-Xa inhibition with low-dose rivaroxaban may have a role in the reduction of ischemic recurrences in patients with atherosclerotic disease manifestations. To date there is very little data, and not conducted in human subjects, on the interplay between anti-Xa blockade with low-dose rivaroxaban and antiplatelet therapies, and in particular how this affects profiles of platelet reactivity and thrombin generation. Given the potential role for the use of low-dose rivaroxaban for the prevention of ischemic recurrences in patients with atherothrombotic disease manifestations, including coronary artery disease (CAD) and peripheral arterial disease (PAD), the study team proposes a prospective pharmacodynamic (PD) investigation assessing the impact of low-dose rivaroxaban when used in combination with antiplatelet treatment regimens commonly used in clinical practice.