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Heart Failure clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05538819 Completed - Type 2 Diabetes Clinical Trials

The Effects of Glimepiride in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and Chronic Heart Failure

EGPT2D&CHF
Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Thirty years ago, Dzau and Braunwald introduced the concept of a continuum of cardiovascular diseases and defined them as a series of events caused by numerous related and unrelated risk factors, thus developing to end-stage heart disease through many pathophysiological pathways and processes. Owing to treatment concept changes and the urgency of investigating T2D combined with CHF, SUs are being re-evaluated, of which glimepiride is undoubtedly the most promising.

NCT ID: NCT05538611 Enrolling by invitation - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Effect Evaluation of Chain Quality Control Management on Patients With Heart Failure

HF
Start date: September 30, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Heart failure is a chronic disease that spans the home as well as the outpatient and hospital Settings and requires multidisciplinary, continuous disease management. Heart failure management emphasizes seamless connection from admission to return to the family, so as to improve the efficiency of resource use. Early preventive intervention, timely and reasonable drug treatment, integration of effective medical resources, and establishment of A sound and effective management model should be carried out for the population with high risk factors of heart failure (heart function stage A), so as to delay the occurrence and development of heart failure and further avoid the occurrence of malignant cardiovascular events. Therefore, this project aims to establish a "special-general-community-family" chain quality control model with the "general practice department" as the core for patients with chronic heart failure in general hospitals, so as to provide them with a full life cycle, multidimensional, concise and efficient quality control management.At present, the situation of heart failure prevention and treatment in China is grim and the challenge is huge. Heart failure complicated illness, drug dosage adjustment characteristics of professionalism, its emphasis on guide oriented treatment, and should pay attention to individual, need of specialized subject doctor, general practitioners, community doctors and family personal collaborative to maximize the optimal management of patients with chronic heart failure, follow the classification diagnosis and treatment, two-way referral is helpful to improve the long-term prognosis of patients with. At present, HF management has received increasing attention, how to choose a more reasonable, effective and economic management mode is still a problem of disagreement.

NCT ID: NCT05537467 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Effect of Music on Cardiopulmonary Exercise Capacity in Heart Failure Patients

MUSIC-CPX
Start date: September 13, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to assess the effect of music on the heart resulting in a change in their exercise capacity among systolic heart failure patients undergoing Cardiopulmonary Exercise testing.

NCT ID: NCT05532631 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Percutaneous Coronary RevascularizatiOn VERsus Coronary-Artery Bypass Grafting for Multivessel Disease in Patients With Left Ventricular Dysfunction (PROVERB)

PROVERB
Start date: March 16, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A short description, 5000 characters Ischemic cardiomyopathy related to coronary artery disease is currently the leading cause of heart failure. When it is responsible for heart failure, the coronary artery disease likely involves 2 or 3 vessels. Percutaneous coronary angioplasty, which is the other available technique for coronary revascularization, has never been evaluated in this indication. The results of retrospective registries studying the strategy for multivessel revascularization in patients with heart failure are inconsistent and no randomized study has been performed so far. Currently, ESC guidelines recommends to perform coronary-artery bypass grafting (IB) or percutaneous coronary intervention (IIa C) with the acknowledgement that percutaneous coronary intervention has never been properly evaluated in this setting. However, it has been previously demonstrated that left ventricle dysfunction significantly increases mortality and morbidity during and after cardiac surgery (3-10% mortality when LVEF is ≤30%). Moreover, the technical progresses in stent development and manufacturing have led to a dramatic decrease in the incidence of stent thrombosis and in-stent restenosis. Therefore, we hypothesize that percutaneous coronary angioplasty may be an attractive strategy for revascularization in patients with multi-vessel disease and left ventricle dysfunction, who are at high risk of surgical complication. Thus, we aim to test the hypothesis that percutaneous coronary intervention is non-inferior to coronary-artery bypass grafting for revascularization in patients with multivessel disease and left ventricle dysfunction. The main objective is to demonstrate that percutaneous coronary angioplasty is non-inferior to coronary-artery bypass grafting for multivessel revascularization in patients with left ventricular dysfunction on major cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE). Method:A Prospective Randomized Open label, Blinded Endpoint, parallel-group, active controlled, non-inferiority, multicenter trial.

NCT ID: NCT05532046 Terminated - Clinical trials for Chronic Heart Failure

A Study to Learn How Safe Study Drug BAY2413555 is, How it Affects the Body, and How it Moves Into, Through, and Out of the Body Over 4 Weeks of Use in Participants With Heart Failure and Implanted Cardiac Defibrillator or Cardiac Resynchronization Devices (ICD/CRT)

REMOTE-HF
Start date: September 20, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Researchers are looking for a better way to treat people who have chronic heart failure. Chronic heart failure is a medical condition with shortness of breath, tiredness and ankle swelling in which the heart does not pump blood as well as it should. BAY2413555 is a new compound which is under development for the treatment of heart failure. Heart failure is a serious disease in which the heart pumps less well. BAY2413555 is expected to protect the heart and improve cardiac function. The main purpose of this study is to learn how safe BAY2413555 is compared to placebo in participants with chronic heart failure and implanted cardiac defibrillator, or cardiac resynchronization devices (ICD/CRT). A placebo is a treatment that looks like a medicine, but does not have any medicine in it. ICD/CRT are machines placed in the body that use an electric shock/impulse to reset the heart or get it beating correctly. To study the safety, the researchers will record all medical problems the participants may have during the study after starting the study treatment. Medical problems that happen after the participants have started their treatment are also known as "treatment emergent adverse events" (TEAEs). The TEAEs will be compared between participants who received BAY2413555 and those who received placebo. The second purpose of this study is to learn whether BAY2413555 effects electrical signals inside the heart compared to placebo. The study has two parts, A and B. Each part will last for two weeks. In part A, the participants will be assigned by chance to either take BAY2413555 as a tablet by mouth once per day or a placebo. Participants from part A who do not need to stop the study based on predefined criteria continue in part B. They will be assigned by chance to receive either the same dose of BAY2413555 as in part A or a higher dose. Participants who have taken placebo in part A will as well be assigned in part B. Each participant will be in the study for approximately 90 days (including the screening period and follow-up period). In the study, participants will take study medication for 28 days. 8 visits to the study site and 1 telephone contact visit are planned. During the study, the study team will: - do physical examinations - check vital signs - examine heart health using ECG - check the participants' ICD/CRT information - take exercise testing - take blood and urine samples - ask the participants questions about how they are feeling about their quality of life - ask the participants questions about how they are feeling and what adverse events they are having. An adverse event is any problem that happens during the trial. Doctors keep track of all adverse events that happen in trials, even if they do not think the adverse events might be related to the study treatments or a study procedure. Participants will be closely monitored during the entire study duration and site personnel will take action to mitigate any negative effect, if any, as appropriate. About 30 days after the participants take their last treatment, the study doctors and their team will check the participants' health.

NCT ID: NCT05531214 Active, not recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Creating A Cardiorenal Multidisciplinary Team for Management HF and CKD Patients

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Several drugs have been labeled as guideline-directed-medical therapies (GDMT) to improve overall health outcomes and slow the progression of disease in patients with heart failure (HF). Although scientific trials have deemed these drugs to be successful, many HF patients have been unable to either get started on the appropriate drug regimens or be optimized on the doses required to show substantial benefit, particularly in those who also suffer from chronic kidney disease (CKD). This is largely due to the current health care delivery model that requires a primary care clinician or general internist to refer patients to heart failure specialists and nephrologists. The specialty care itself then requires even more coordination resulting in patients getting lost to follow-up, physicians losing track of recommendations from different clinics, and too many separate electronic medical documentations to consolidate prior to deciding on what medication is appropriate at one thirty-minute outpatient visit. This study plans to create a new, virtual cardio-renal multidisciplinary team including a heart failure specialist and nephrologist to ease the coordination of care and consequently show a better implementation of GDMT in patients with HF and CKD when comparing those rates to the traditional referral-based way that these medications get prescribed.

NCT ID: NCT05528588 Active, not recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Furoscix in Heart Failure Patients With Diuretic Resistance

RESISTANCE-HF
Start date: June 2, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This will be a randomized, open-label pilot study of 70 patients with and without diuretic resistance who were recently admitted and discharged for acute decompensated heart failure with and oral diuretic regimen testing whether Furoscix is more effective at achieving post-discharge outpatient diuresis than standard of care. Diuretic resistance will be identified using the BAN-ADHF (BUN, creAtinine, NP-levels, Age, Diabetes and DBP, HF hospitalization, and atrial Fibrillation) score which has been integrated into the electronic health record. The score is integer-based with a score of ≥ 12 indicating diuretic resistance with high likelihood of poor outcomes. The primary outcome is diuretic efficacy as measured by volume of urine produced 8 hours after treatment and urine sodium levels (assessed hourly or per urination episode within 8 hours of treatment).

NCT ID: NCT05527522 Completed - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Nutritional Intervention in Malnourished Patients With Chronic Heart Failure

PACMAN-HF
Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Malnutrition is common in patients with heart failure (HF) and is associated with a worse prognosis. However, there is little information on the impact of nutritional intervention in malnourished patients with heart failure. Therefore, the aim of our study is to evaluate whether a specific nutritional intervention has an impact on mortality and hospitalizations, quality of life, nutritional status, and functional capacity in patient with heart failure and malnutrition.

NCT ID: NCT05525936 Not yet recruiting - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Echocardiographic Evaluation of RV Injury in the ICU

RECHOicu
Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The adequate characterization of RV injury is currently unknown. The hypothesis is that the best characterization of RV injury is the one with the most significant impact on the response to fluids and on the outcome. An RV failure is expected to induce fluid-unresponsiveness and potentially worst outcome. The main objective is to characterize different types of RV injury in critically ill patients by examining their association, including predictive performances, in hemodynamics parameters, ventilation parameters, and clinical outcomes The study will be based on the realisation of an echocardiography within 48 hours following inclusion.

NCT ID: NCT05525663 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction

Physical Rehabilitation for Older Patients With Acute Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction

REHAB-HFpEF
Start date: February 16, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The REHAB-HFpEF trial will determine whether a novel physical rehabilitation intervention will improve the primary outcome of combined all-cause rehospitalizations and mortality and the secondary outcome of major mobility disability during 6-month follow-up in patients hospitalized for heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), which is nearly unique to older persons, and for which there are few treatment options.