View clinical trials related to Myocardial Ischemia.
Filter by:As a result of the implementation of Protocol Am3.0, the design and objective of the NEVO II trial were changed to focus on the safety follow-up of the 103 NEVO™ subjects. Although this trial started interventional, the remainder of the study will be observational. The objective of this prospective, observational study is to ensure the safety and the wellbeing of subjects treated with the NEVO™ SES.
Since diabetic platelets are characterized by an enhanced turnover rate, it may be hypothesized that an increase in the frequency, rather than the dose, of drug administration may be a more effective strategy to inhibit platelet reactivity in diabetic patients as this may enable COX-1 blockade of newly generated platelets. However, how different dosing regimens impact the pharmacodynamic effects of aspirin selectively in diabetes mellitus has been poorly explored. Therefore, the aim of the present pilot investigation was to evaluate how increasing the frequency of aspirin administration, remaining within the daily recommended therapeutic doses, affects antiplatelet responsiveness in diabetic patients with coronary artery disease.
A higher degree of platelet inhibition remains the goal of peri-interventional and long-term anti-thrombotic therapy in patients with coronary artery disease. In clinical practice, patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention with stent implantation who are already on clopidogrel therapy get re-loaded with clopidogrel. This is based on prior observations showing that higher inhibition of platelet aggregation may be achieved by giving a loading dose of clopidogrel in patients with coronary artery disease while on chronic clopidogrel therapy. However, to date it is unknown if greater inhibition of platelet aggregation can be achieved by adding a prasugrel loading dose in patients on chronic prasugrel therapy. Therefore, understanding the pharmacodynamic implications of a prasugrel re-load strategy in patients on already on chronic prasugrel therapy will be useful.
Currently the research issue in establishing the role of periodontal disease (PD) in coronary heart disease (CHD) risk is to define the pathways that lead to cause-effect relationship between PD and CHD. There is no consensus on definition of a periodontal disease case or the threshold level that may give clear indication for this relationship. Periodontal therapy has been used in different studies with the hope that a change in periodontal disease status may modify the factors associated with CHD risk. Many of these studies, on role of periodontal therapy in the reduction of CHD associated risk-factors, were based on small study samples, and very few studies were randomized controlled trials. So a need for large prospective studies is warranted in literature.----------- A single-blind parallel-arm randomized controlled clinical trial was designed to observe the influence of periodontal treatment on serum inflammatory mediators of hsC-reactive protein, white blood cells and fibrinogen in CHD patients. Hypothesis: Periodontal therapy in CHD patients, by reducing periodontal inflammation, may decrease the host systemic inflammatory burden associated with atherogenic processes.
Despite recent advances in stent technology and clot reducing drug therapy, acute stent occlusion or thrombosis (ST), still occurs and can be life threatening. It has been shown that certain features of how the stent relates to the artery wall may predict ST. One such feature, so-called stent strut malapposition (SSM), can be assessed after implantation but current imaging techniques are relatively unreliable. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) is a newer technology that can be performed safely and easily after angioplasty and may allow the stent struts to be assessed more accurately and reliably. This study will use OCT to examine how two different types of commonly used drug-eluting stents relate to the artery wall. The Xience V (Abbott Vascular, USA) stent has thinner struts and a more open frame than the Cypher (Cordis, USA) stent. We hypothesise therefore that the potentially more pliable structure of the Xience V stent will be associated with greater contact with the vessel wall. This may have a bearing on the relative rate of SSM, although large studies have shown the rate to be low in both the Cypher and the Xience V stent. We believe that OCT imaging of SSM and symmetry of the stent immediately after angioplasty will compliment conventional visual assessment and may identify those patients in whom further improvement of stent with a balloon is necessary. This study will involve the random allocation of forty patients requiring coronary angioplasty to one of the Cypher or Xience V stent. The procedure will be performed in the usual manner as indicated clinically and will include imaging of the stented artery segment with OCT once the operator is satisfied with the visual result by angiography.
BACKGROUND: Bifurcated lesions are a challenging subset in percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). The selection of the type of drug-eluting stents (DES) and the technique for stent implantation have not been clarified. The side-branch (SB) is emerging as critical point, accounting for more than a third of the significant restenosis in the DES era. A series of data supports the adoption of a conservative strategy: stenting the main vessel (MV) only and reserving a conservative approach on the SB. Yet, the clinical relevance in terms of inducible ischemia of sub-optimal angiographic result has not been clarified. AIMS OF THE STUDY: The aims of the present study are: 1. to compare in a prospective study the acute 3D angiographic results and the late clinical outcome of Sirolimus-eluting (SES) vs Everolimus-eluting (EES) vs Zotarolimus eluting stent (ZES) obtained using a provisional TAP-stenting technique. 2. to prospectively assess the clinical relevance (inducible ischemia) of suboptimal angiographic result in the SB after stenting. METHODS TO BE APPLIED: 75 consecutive patients with bifurcated lesions undergoing PCI with the provisional T-and-small-protruding (TAP) technique with ZES implantation will be enrolled. Procedural and post-PCI details will be prospectively recorded. The subgroup of patients in which complete revascularization has been achieved will enter a systematic assessment of inducible ischemia by early and late exercise tests. Off line 3D quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) assessment will be performed and used to divide the study population in 2 groups according to the SB residual stenosis: - Group O (optimal SB angiographic result): post-PCI SB area stenosis<50% - Group S (sub-optimal SB angiographic result): post-PCI SB area stenosis>50%. For the comparison among SES and EES, data will be obtained from the randomized trial SEA-SIDE (NCT00697372). PRIMARY STUDY END-POINTS. 1. COMPARISON BETWEEN ZES, SES AND EES: SB acute angiographic result; SB trouble; target bifurcation failure. 2. SB-RELATED ISCHAEMIA of Group O vs Group S in patients with complete revascularization: inducible ischemia at the early exercise test or occurrence of early spontaneous ischemia related to the SB.
The objective of the present study is to analyze the cost-effectiveness of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using TAXUS stents compared to the costs of coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD) in the first 5 years and then 10 years after intervention. Multivessel PCI or CABG was performed in 114 or 93 patients, respectively. Clinical outcomes, in terms of incidence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI), all-cause death, target vessel revascularization (TVR) and stroke, resource use and costs are analyzed prospectively over a 5 and 10-year follow-up (FUP) period. Overall costs consist of the baseline costs of the index procedure (PCI or CABG), clinical and angiographic procedure-related treatments during the entire FUP. The primary endpoint is cost-effectiveness and clinical effectiveness, defined as the reduction of the composite of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE).
To determine the glucose regulation status of patients who were suspected to have CAD in central Taiwan.
To investigate the mid- and long-term effect of Enhanced External Counterpulsation combined with guideline-driven standard treatment on patients documented with and/or at high risk of coronary artery disease.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate new generation drug eluting stent (DES) of MicroPort of its safety, efficacy and delivery system in treating CAD.