View clinical trials related to Heart Failure.
Filter by:Heart failure (HF) is a major public health problem. The New York Heart Association (NYHA) Functional Classification by a HF provider helps to guide their decisions in patient treatment. The purpose of this study is to further examine the NYHA Classification Guide that is designed to assist healthcare providers. The investigators will conduct the study in the outpatient clinic setting where adult patients with chronic heart failure are treated. HF providers will be asked to complete the NYHA classification Guide and then participants will complete a standardized 6-minute walk test which is considered as the gold standard. Participant results will be compared between providers' assigned class and the results from the 6-minute walk test. The subsequent phase of the study will be incorporation of the NYHA Classification Guide into clinical practice. HF providers will use the NYHA Classification Guide for 30 days in the clinic setting and will report their perceptions.
Assess the usability and acceptance of the P-STEP app, through allowing participants with specific chronic conditions to pilot the app for 12-weeks.
The research aims to compare the response of Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy (CRT) using HF ECG guided or the conventional method of Q-LV measurement guided optimisation for left ventricular, pacing site.
This study aims at identifying processes that are deregulated in blood cells by Clonal Hematopoiesis of Indeterminate Potential (CHIP) which are involved in the development of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HEpEF).
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) represents one of the largest unmet needs in cardiovascular medicine. Heart muscle scarring (myocardial fibrosis) is a key HFpEF disease mechanism and represents an important therapeutic target. Myocardial fibrosis can be measured non-invasively using the cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) extracellular volume (ECV) technique. However, some patients cannot undergo MRI scanning, and it is expensive. Circulating biomarkers in the blood that are sensitive to changes in myocardial fibrosis would represent an attractive cheaper and accessible alternative. This study aims to assess baseline levels of, and longitudinal change in, circulating biomarkers relating to fibrosis and cardiovascular disease in gifted samples from PIROUETTE trial participants, and evaluate the relationship between the biomarkers, anti-fibrotic treatment response and other study measurements.
HumanITcare has implemented a cloud platform for the telemonitoring of chronic patients through portable medical devices and an alarm-based system that issues health alerts when a patient's biomedical measurement is outside a predefined clinical range. The platform frees doctors and caregivers from reviewing individual patient data for abnormalities, speeding up the decision-making process and reducing hospital visits. With this study we intend to validate the efficacy of the app for patients and digital platform for medical professionals, evaluating the increase in the quality of life of patients and measuring the reduction in the incidence of the main critical events of HF. In addition, the study will validate the new API interoperability standards and platform architecture and will assess the usability of the platform by delivering satisfaction questionnaires to patients and professionals at the end of the study. This study is being carried out within the framework of a European project promoted by the European Innovation Council (EIC).
Left ventricular thrombus is found in 10 to 25% of patients with impaired left ventricular function following ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and up to 20% in dilated cardiomyopathy in observational studies. Likewise, the incidence of atrial thrombus among atrial fibrillation patients treated by vitamin K antagonist (VKA) is between 0.25% and 7%. Despite anticoagulant therapy, intra-cardiac thrombus remains a severe complication associated with a high risk of systemic embolism and subsequent mortality but also bleeding events related to the anticoagulation therapy. The class of non-vitamin K antagonist direct oral anticoagulant (DOA) has emerged in the last decades and has systematically surpassed VKA in the different clinical settings by providing at minimum a similar efficacy and a better safety profile. In the absence of randomized study in the specific clinical setting of intracardiac thrombus, international Guidelines recommend, on the basis of expert opinion, the use of VKA for at least 3 to 6 months in case of left ventricular thrombus and there is no specific recommendation for thrombus management from other cardiac localizations. In comparison to VKA, the easier management and the large evidence of better safety of DOA make it an interesting anticoagulant strategy. Data for left ventricule thrombosis treatment are limited and only supported by observational cohorts. However, these recent cohorts have shown promising data in this indication reporting similar thrombus regression following DOA in comparison to VKA and similar ischemic outcomes although no head-to-head comparison would be powered. As a consequence, the multicentric randomized ARGONAUT trial aims to confirm these results and evaluate the impact of DOA compared to VKA on thrombus regression and clinical outcomes among patients with intracardiac thrombus, regardless of the thrombus localization and any underlying heart disease.
It's a phase III, prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the pulmonary artery denervation (PADN) for heart failure (HF) patients diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension associate with left heart disease (PH-LHD) by right heart catheterization.
The aim of our study to determine the demography, relation between patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and those with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in Sohag university hospital.
This pragmatic clinical trial embedded in an accountable care organization will determine the comparative effectiveness of two approaches for assigning care coordinators to older adults at risk for cardiovascular outcomes. The hypothesis is that assigning care coordinators to older adults based on perceived need will be more effective at preventing emergency department visits and hospitalizations compared to usual care.