View clinical trials related to Coronary Artery Disease.
Filter by:Multicenter, retrospective registry to collect baseline, clinical, procedural, in hospital and 9-12 month follow-up data to compare major adverse cardiac events in patients receiving Promus Premier drug eluting stent to data already collected from the REWARDS-TLX Registry in which patients received either the Taxus Liberte or XIENCE V drug eluting stent.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and performance of a new coronary artery stent for treating blockages in the arteries supplying blood to the heart muscle. The Amaranth FORTITUDE scaffold releases a drug (sirolimus) to reduce the likelihood of the treated blood vessel developing a new blockage. In addition, the scaffold dissolves away over time, leaving no permanent implant after the blood vessel has healed.
The purpose of this study is to compare early vessel healing after implantation of SYNERGY drug eluting stent (DES) or BioMatrix NeoFlex DES at one and three months in two cohorts.
BFPET will be evaluated as a diagnostic PET agent for assessing myocardial perfusion in subjects with known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) as compared to standard nuclear myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI). The safety of BFPET will be evaluated in known or suspected CAD subjects.
This is a protocol to facilitate on-site calibration of the technical aspects of the Siemens Biograph mMR (molecular MR) Positron Emission Tomography-Magnetic Resonance (PET-MR) scanner and the 3T Siemens Vida MR scanner at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (CSMC) Biomedical Imaging Research Institute (BIRI) Research Imaging Core after scanner installation. The mMR is a FDA-approved standard clinical device (non-experimental) and will be used in accordance with clearance and approval from the FDA. The Vida is a state-of-the-art FDA approved scanner and will be clinically licensed within a short time.
The aim of this study is to compare the effect of warm blood cardioplegia administration with and without roller pump on perioperative myocardial injury, reflected by postoperative biomarker release, in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) with a minimal extracorporeal circuit (MECC).
Current methods based on traditional Cardiovascular risk factors are not clinically useful for identifying Type 2 Diabetes patients at risk of developing acute Cardiovascular ischemic events (ie.myocardial infarction or stroke). In addition, Cardiovascular ischemic events in Type 2 Diabetes population have worse prognosis than in general population. In fact, there is sufficient experimental evidence indicating that diabetes exaggerates the deleterious effects of ischemic events and worsens their outcome. A prolonged sub-clinical phase exists before a Cardiovascular event occurs in Type 2 Diabetes patients. Therefore, new strategies aimed at identifying those patients with this subclinical Cardiovascular Diabetes and, consequently, more prone to develop Cardiovascular events is a challenge to be met.
Clinical evaluation of the Orsiro LESS in subjects requiring coronary revascularization with Drug Eluting Stents (DES). Along with it, an explanatory (hypothesis-finding) problem will be investigated, whether the patient's body inflammation status correlates with the clinical outcome.
The aim of this study is a comparative evaluation of progression of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in patients with coronary artery disease after isolated CABG and CABG combined with pulmonary vein isolation. Hypothesis of the study - patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and coronary artery disease after CABG in combination with isolation of the pulmonary veins have a better outcomes for the progression of AF compared with patients undergoing isolated CABG.
Purpose. Comparison of outcomes in patients underwent CABG combined with left atrial and biatrial radiofrequency ablation of long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation. Hypothesis of the study - patients with long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation and coronary artery disease after CABG in combination with biatrial RFA have a better outcomes for the freedom of AF compared with patients undergoing left atrial RFA during CABG.