View clinical trials related to Coronary Disease.
Filter by:Study purpose: To evaluate fractional flow reserve-guided side branch intervention strategy Method: Provisional side branch intervention if jailed side branch FFR<0.75
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of 3 different rapamycin-eluting-stent platforms to reduce coronary artery reblockage after stent implantation
This is a multi-center, prospective, non-randomized study. Approximately 90 patients from up to 16 centers will be entered in the study. Patients will be followed clinically for up to 5 years post-procedure. All patients will have a repeat angiography at 6 months follow-up. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Genous Bio-engineered R stentTM in conjunction with optimal statin therapy (80mg of atorvastatin), in the treatment of elective patients with up to two de novo native coronary artery lesions. The Genous stent received CE mark for the intended indication in August 2005
Objectives: A prospective investigation of the effect of omeprazole, a proton pump inhibitor, on the anti-platelet action of clopidogrel. The main decision criterion will concern change in VASP protein phosphorylation under treatment. Phosphorylation will be measured before and after administration of omeprazole versus placebo in patients undergoing clopidogrel treatment. Type of study: Single center, double blind, randomized parallel group study versus placebo, comparing two treatment groups: - clopidogrel + omeprazole + standard regime (beta-blockers, atorvastatin, IEC, aspirin) - clopidogrel + placebo+ standard regime (beta-blockers, atorvastatin, IEC, aspirin) Study population: 120 patients from the Cardiology Department of Brest University hospital, Brest (France), receiving a standard treatment comprising a loading dose of clopidogrel followed by a daily dose of 75 mg associated to 75 mg aspirin, will be randomized between 20 mg/day omeprazole and 20 mg/day placebo treatment groups. The efficacy of clopidogrel will be assessed by inter-group comparison on the VASP test. Study period: 7 days' treatment per patient. Total study period estimated at 6 months. Expected findings: The results should confirm the suspected negative effect of omeprazole on clopidogrel's impact on arterial thrombosis risk, secondarily allowing new recommendations to be drawn up for this association.
To compare computed tomography (CT) images (pictures) of the coronary arteries using the General Electric (GE) LightSpeed VCT scanner with x-ray coronary angiography in patients with typical or atypical chest pain suspected of coronary artery disease (CAD).
Previous clinical investigations have demonstrated the utility of β-adrenergic blockade in reducing perioperative ischaemic events, ultimately translating into a decrease in cardiac morbidity and mortality. However, β-blocker therapy remains underutilized in clinical practice because of concerns of potential adverse effects such as a reduced inotropic state, which might result in acute congestive heart failure or hypotension. Therefore, additional treatment with a positive inotropic agent might be needed. Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (PDEIs) offer a favourable pharmacological profile in this setting and stimulate cardiac function in the absence of the β-adrenergic receptor. We hypothesize that the combination of PDEI and β-blocker therapy would decrease perioperative plasma concentrations of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) in patients requiring major vascular surgery. BNP is chosen as our primary outcome variable because of its importance as a sensitive correlate of myocardial dysfunction and its prognostic value for predicting the risk of cardiac death across the entire spectrum of acute coronary syndromes.
To compare the relative efficacy and safety of the TAXUS Express2 stents and the Cypher stents among a broad, unselected patient population treated in a nationwide, multi-center clinical registry representative of 'real-world,' contemporary clinical practice. A secondary objective is to examine performance of the two stents in pre-specified subgroup populations and examine regional and national patterns in outcomes.
This is a sixteen-week follow-on and 28 week single-blind extension study for patients who participated in study NK-104-304.
Inflammation is associated with worsening outcomes among individuals with CAD; C-reactive protein is a well-known marker of inflammation. Both healthy patients and those with a history of CAD who exhibit elevated CRP are at greater risk for cardiovascular events. Despite CRP's well- documented association with increased risk in the development and progression of CAD, the specific mechanism of elevated CRP in CAD is not known. One possible etiology includes a continuous prothrombotic process associated with CAD. Several studies demonstrate a link between platelet activation and inflammation. If thrombotic processes are involved in the mechanism of elevated CRP, antiplatelet therapy, including clopidogrel, could effectively reduce CRP. Preliminary studies have demonstrated a reduction of CRP with aspirin and a clear association between clopidogrel therapy and reduced CRP, however no randomized trials have been performed. We hypothesize that the proinflammatory effects of platelet activation may be inhibited with combined clopidogrel and aspirin therapy.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of a pre-discharge written personal endorsement to the patient by the patient's attending cardiologist or cardiac surgeon (MD endorsement) to take part in the Cardiac Rehabilitation and Secondary Prevention (CR) program, in addition to the standard CR referral, compared to the standard CR referral alone, on CR program enrollment within 2 months of index hospital discharge following admission for myocardial infarction, unstable angina, coronary angioplasty, or coronary artery bypass.