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Ischemic Preconditioning clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03900390 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ischemic Preconditioning

The Study of Potency of Cross-preconditioning to Prevent Ischemic-reperfusion Injury for Heart Transplantation Recipient

Start date: July 7, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In recent years, a large number of studies confirmed the protective effect of ischemic preconditioning on myocardium against ischemia/reperfusion injury, but the clinical data of the effectiveness of ischemic preconditioning in heart transplantation is still missing. Inspired by the promising data of ischemic preconditioning from the previous reports, the investigators firstly introduce a novel method of cross ischemic preconditioning technique to prevent ischemia/reperfusion injury to heart transplant recipients. This study will evaluate whether this cross-preconditioning technique would attenuate ischemia/ reperfusion injury to the heart transplant recipients, reduce Intensive Care Unit(ICU) and total hospitalization stays and the incidence of cardiovascular adverse events and improve the long-term survival outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT03380663 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ischemic Preconditioning

Conditioning Based Intervention Strategies

ConBIS
Start date: September 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall objective of this study is to uncover and utilize the mechanisms behind the activation of endogenous organ protection by remote ischemic conditioning (RIC), high intensity traditional resistance training (TRT) and low intensity blood flow restricted resistance exercise (BFRE) with the perspective of defining their applicability for immediate organ protection in ischemia-reperfusion injury (acute conditioning) and subsequent tissue repair (chronic conditioning) during a prolonged recovery period. This objective will be achieved by studying which and how molecular pathways underlying these protective mechanisms are shared and can be transferred to treat medical conditions. A specific focus is the roles of EVs and miRNAs. Another objective is to explore how exercise training with and without ischemia can counteract muscle wasting.