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Coronary Artery Disease clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01960309 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Minimal Invasive Imaging of Coronary Artery Disease in Patients With Asymptomatic Myocardial Injury After Major Non-cardiac Surgery.

AMI-NCS
Start date: September 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a cross-sectional pilot study to assess coronary artery disease with minimal invasive techniques in patients with asymptomatic troponin elevation after noncardiac surgery. The primary objective is to quantify coronary artery disease, as determined by coronary CT and MR, as a cause of postoperative myocardial injury. The secondary objective is to correlate coronary calciumscore to postoperative levels of troponin.

NCT ID: NCT01959191 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Clinical Significance of Platelet Reactivity on Clopidogrel During Off-pump Coronary Artery Bypass

Start date: January 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Objective: To evaluate the early and late prognoses of patients according to platelet reactivity after clopidogrel administration and determine whether the measurement of platelet inhibition predicted 1-year clinical outcomes after off-pump coronary bypass (OPCAB) Study design - Prospective, observational, single-center study - Subjects with OPCAB surgery who meet all inclusion and exclusion criteria will be enrolled. - Platelet reactivity after 7-days clopidogrel treatment from the day of surgery will be measured by VerifyNow system. - Dual antiplatelet therapy including aspirin and clopidogrel will be administered for 1 year after surgery and subjects will be followed-up for 1 year about primary endpoint. - Cutoff value of P2Y12 reactivity units (PRUs) for primary endpoint will be assessed and the cohort will be divided by the PRU cutoff value (low/high platelet reactivity groups). - The primary and secondary endpoints will be compared between two groups

NCT ID: NCT01957540 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Differential Effect of Ticagrelor Versus Prasugrel Maintenance Dose on Endothelial Function of Peripheral Vessels in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease

Start date: June 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Ticagrelor administration, whose molecule resembles to adenosine, led to reduction in overall mortality and thrombotic cardiovascular (CV) events when directly compared to clopidogrel in the PLATO trial, implicating possible pleiotropic actions for the drug. It has been shown that ticagrelor increases adenosine concentration, by interfering with its red blood cells' uptake and by inducing the release of ATP which is then converted to adenosine. Recent studies in healthy volunteers and patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) have shown that ticagrelor increases the coronary blood flow in response to intravenous adenosine administration. Ticagrelor administration, in comparison with other P2Y12 inhibitors, may influence the endothelial function, as assessed by the Peripheral Arterial Tonometry method (EndoPAT 2000 system (Itamar Medical, Caesarea, Israel), which is a method for evaluating endothelial dysfunction and has been found to positively correlate with flow mediated dilatation (FMD). This is prospective, randomized study with a crossover design, which will be conducted in patients with CAD under prasugrel maintenance dose (MD) 10mg once a day for at least a 3-month period. At Day 0 (day of randomization) eligible patients will be assigned to either: - Ticagrelor 90mg twice a day for the next 15 days or - Prasugrel 10mg once a day for the next 15 days At Day 0 (before treatment onset)patients wiil be subjected to a baseline peripheral arterial tonometry measurement. Measurement will be repeated at Day 15 and then treatment crossover will be performed for the next 15 days (without an intervening washout period). At Day 30 patients will be subjected again to peripheral arterial tonometry assessment. Peripheral blood sample will be taken from the patients in Day 0 for genotyping control.

NCT ID: NCT01957527 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Offset of Ticagrelor's Effect on Endothelial Function as Assessed With Peripheral Arterial Tonometry (EndoPAT Assay)

Start date: June 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Observational

Ticagrelor administration, whose molecule resembles to adenosine, led to reduction in overall mortality and thrombotic cardiovascular (CV) events when directly compared to clopidogrel in the PLATO trial, implicating possible pleiotropic actions for the drug. It has been shown that ticagrelor increases adenosine concentration, by interfering with its red blood cells' uptake and by inducing the release of ATP which is then converted to adenosine. Recent studies in healthy volunteers and patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) have shown that ticagrelor increases the coronary blood flow in response to intravenous adenosine administration. Ticagrelor administration, in comparison with other P2Y12 inhibitors, may influence the endothelial function, as assessed by the Peripheral Arterial Tonometry method (EndoPAT 2000 system (Itamar Medical, Caesarea, Israel), which is a method for evaluating endothelial dysfunction and has been found to positively correlate with flow mediated dilatation (FMD). This is a prospective, observational study, which will be conducted in patients with coronary artery disease subjected to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) under ticagrelor maintenance dose (MD) 90mg x 2, who are about to stop treatment, due to completion of 1 year antiplatelet therapy. Eligible patients will be subjected to peripheral arterial tonometry at Day 0 (immediately after receiving the last pill of ticagrelor) and at day 2 and day 5 post study drug discontinuation. Peripheral blood sample will be taken from the patients at Day 0 for genotype analysis.

NCT ID: NCT01956448 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

SORT-OUT VI - Randomized Clinical Comparison of Biomatrix Flex® and Resolute Integrity®

SO VI
Start date: March 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To perform a randomized comparison between the BioMatrix Flex™ and the Resolute Integrity® stents in the treatment of unselected patients with ischemic heart disease.

NCT ID: NCT01955759 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Patients With Coronary Artery Disease Scheduled for by Pass Surgery

Atrial Fibrillation and By-pass Surgery

Start date: December 2013
Phase: Phase 0
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to evaluate whether combined therapy with beta-blocker, amiodarone and statine is better than beta-blocker alone for the prevention of atrial fibrillation after coronary by-pass surgery.

NCT ID: NCT01955330 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Long Term Follow-up Hybrid Revascularization

Start date: September 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

OBJECTIVES: The objectives of the year study are two-fold: 1. To determine the 5-7 year patency rate (rate of open bypass grafts) of the LITA graft and stent of patients who have already had robotically-assisted Hybrid CABG surgery using CTA and MPS-MIBI. 2. To determine patient quality of life at 5-7 years after robotically-assisted Hybrid CABG surgery

NCT ID: NCT01955200 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

OPTImal Management of Antithrombotic Agents: OPTIMA-2 Trial

OPTIMA-2
Start date: October 5, 2013
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

High on-treatment platelet reactivity (HOPR) is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We sought to investigate the efficacy and safety of 1-month intensified antiplatelet therapies in post-PCI patients with HOPR.

NCT ID: NCT01954771 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

SMBG Protocols Predicting Glucose Levels in Senior Diabetics With CAD

Start date: June 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) is a common way to assess glycemic control in diabetes management. Multiple times of blood glucose measurements by fingerstick in the same day are of tough challenge to it. The changes and variations of glucose excursion in senior diabetics with Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)involve a safety issue besides glycated hemoglobin (GHb) value. The goal of this study is to explore modified SMBG protocols for precisely monitoring and predicting glycemic excursion, variability in senior type 2 diabetics with CAD.

NCT ID: NCT01954303 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

HsTnT in Stable Coronary Artery Disease

Start date: October 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Coronary artery disease (CAD) is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Life threatening manifestations such as acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and sudden cardiac death are the most important causes of death in many countries. Cardiac troponin is a biomarker with a high specificity for cardiac necrosis and is recommended for diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction by the Universal definition of myocardial infarction. Since a new generation of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays has become commercially available a few years ago, myocardial infarction can be detected earlier and even small AMIs, that were classified as unstable angina pectoris (UAP) with the less sensitive assays, are detectable now. On the other side, more patients with acute or chronic myocardial damage not due to AMI are identified now. Thereby, the reason for elevated troponin levels should be sought actively, because high troponin levels were associated with adverse outcome - independent of the underlying pathomechanism. The reasons for troponin elevations in patients with stable CAD are not clear yet. Associations with extensive atherosclerosis, carotid lesions and complex coronary plaques in coronary CT scans were reported. Therefore, patients with elevated troponin levels represent a risk population and might profit from intensified secondary prevention. In this context, ticagrelor might be part of a prevention strategy as currently tested in the PEGASUS trial. We plan to conduct a single-centre pilot study in a cohort with clinically stable patients of our outpatient clinic, because data regarding prevalence, causes and prognosis of elevated troponin values in unselected cohorts is sparse. Therefore, all patients (n=910) that presented to our outpatient clinic 12 months after introduction of the high-sensitivity troponin T assay (june 2009) and were free of complaints or presented with UAP are being enrolled. All patients are characterized by demographic, laboratory and clinical characteristics (including medication) and all available imaging data (exercise-ecg, echocardiography, stress-echocardiography, computed tomography, cardiac MRI and coronary angiography) in order to compare baseline characteristics of troponin positive and troponin negative patients. In addition, the Framingham- and PROCAM-Score representing established calculators of long-term risk prediction are calculated. Prognostic endpoints are defined as severe cardiovascular events and progress of the initially diagnosed disease. Those endpoints are associated with the initial hs-cTnT value and serial changes.