View clinical trials related to Coronary Disease.
Filter by:This study investigates whether chronic heart rate reduction with ivabradine (Procoralan®, Servier, France) affects aortic compliance and endothelial function in patients with chronic stable coronary artery disease.
To study whether renal sympathetic denervation(RSD) will reduce the all-cause mortality and the recurrence rate of a composite of cardiovascular event(including angina, myocardial infarction, repeat percutaneous coronary intervention and coronary artery bypass grafting) in patients after percutaneous coronary intervention(PCI). Besides whether RSD can reduce the risk factors for coronary heart disease.
Multiple overlapping drug-eluting coronary stents (DES) are usually needed to treat long coronary stenoses but this strategy is expensive and the response to overlapping DES has not been extensively studied. The recent availability of bioabsorbable polymer DES could allow treatment of long coronary stenoses without leaving gross burden of non-absorbable polymer in the vessel wall, even in case of overlapping stents. Thus we planned to evaluate which of the 2 strategies, namely using a single long biabsorbable DES or two shorter biabsorbable DES with minimal overlapping, is better in treating long coronary stenoses. The study is a spontanous randomized multicenter open-label study. A maximum of 300 patients with stable angina and at leat 1 coronary stenosis >28mm and <40mm of length will be randomized in 1:1 fashion by a Web-based electronic CRF. The long stent group (Group A) will be treated by a single 44mm Biomime DES (II generation DES with bioabsorbable polymer, Meril Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd., Gujarat, India). The short stent group (Group B) will be treated by 2 short Biomime DES positioned with minimal overlapping. The primary end-point of the study will be the 6 moth in-stent late lumen loss. Seconadry end-points will be 1, 6 and 12 month overall mortality, myocardial infarction, target vessel revascularization, stent thrombosis and MACE (combination of the 3 previous clinical end-points). Patients will be evaluated by 6-month control coronary angiography and late lumen loss in the stented vessel will be measured in a quantitative coronary angiography Core Lab (Cardioimaging Centre, Novara, Italy)
The investigators hypothesized that dexmedetomidine as an anesthetic adjunct can be used in the setting of off-pump coronary bypass procedure and can provide benefits to cardiac function and cognitive performance on the ground of the dexmedetomidine's characteristics.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate serial changes of neointimal coverage after everolimus-eluting stent implantation at 3-, 6- and 12-months by OCT examination.
Vascular stenosis as a result of neointimal hyperplasia is a major clinical problem that has an impact on multiple and diverse disciplines, including cardiology (coronary restenosis), cardiothoracic and vascular surgery (saphenous vein and polytetrafluoroethylene [PTFE] graft failure), neurology (carotid stenosis), nephrology (dialysis access dysfunction), and transplant medicine (chronic allograft rejection in hearts and kidneys). [1] In marked contrast to the deleterious effects of smooth muscle progenitor cells on neointimal hyperplasia, circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) are believed to play an important role in vascular repair and in the inhibition of neointimal hyperplasia. [2] Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) circulate in adult peripheral blood and contribute to neovascularization. Satoshi et al. have demonstrated that lineage-committed EPCs and CD34-positive mononuclear cells, their putative precursors, are mobilized during an acute ischemic event in humans. [3] Reduced levels of circulating EPCs independently predict atherosclerotic disease progression, thus supporting an important role for endogenous vascular repair to modulate the clinical course of coronary artery disease. [4] These observations prompt the hypothesis that circulating EPCs may provide an endogenous repair mechanism to counteract surgery-induced endothelial cell injury and to replace dysfunctional endothelium perioperatively. Therefore, the investigators examined whether levels of circulating EPCs correlate with time course and outcomes of coronary artery bypass surgery to establish a clinical role of endogenous endothelial repair mediated by circulating EPCs.
This is a prospective, multi-center, open label, randomized study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of The TIVOLI Biodegradable polymer Rapamycin-Eluting Stent comparing with The FIREBIRD2™ Rapamycin-eluting Stent (DES) for Treatment Coronary Revascularization.
The study is designed to assess the effect of statin on atherosclesrosis progression as well as to explore its potential mechanism besides lipid modifying , such as effect on inflammation and vascular calcification.
The investigators hypothesized that genetic variants of G protein influence the development of restenosis and clinical outcome of patients receiving drug-eluting stents (DES).
Randomized trials have demonstrated an excellent safety and efficacy profile for the chromium everolimus-eluting stent. The platinum chromium everolimus-eluting sten (PtCr-EES) uses the identical antiproliferative agent and polymer but with a novel platinum chromium scaffold designed for enhanced deliverability, vessel conformability, side-branch access, radiopacity, radial strength, and fracture resistance. However, the efficacy of the PtCr-EES for complex coronary artery diseases subsets such as chronic total occlusion, bifurcation lesion, left main trunk disease, and small vessel diseases is still unknown.