View clinical trials related to Acute Coronary Syndrome.
Filter by:Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) is one of the strongest predictors of mortality and morbidity in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) remains the gold standard for LVEF measurement. Currently, LVEF can be estimated at the time of the coronary angiogram but requires a ventriculography. This latter is performed at the price of an increased amount of contrast media injected and puts the patients at risk for mechanical complications, ventricular arrhythmia or atrio-ventricular blocks. Artificial intelligence (AI) has previously been shown to be an accurate method for determining LVEF using different data sources. Fur the purpose of this study, we aim at validating prospectively an AI algorithm, called CathEF, for the prediction of real-time LVEF (AI-LVEF) compared to TTE-LVEF and ventriculography in patients undergoing coronary angiogram for ACS.
The Kitasato PCI Registry is a single-center, observational, prospective study. This study aims to investigate the impact of characteristics in clinical manifestation, patients' background, procedure of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and pre/post PCI culprit/nonculprit lesion observed by intra-coronary imaging modality on clinical outcomes.
The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of high dose atorvastatin (40 mg) versus high dose rosuvastatin (20 mg) in Egyptian type II diabetic patients with previous acute coronary syndrome history. This open-labeled prospective, randomized clinical trial compared once daily atorvastatin 40mg (Ator®) versus once daily rosuvastatin 20mg (Crestor®). The primary outcome was the 50% reduction in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels at 12 weeks. The secondary outcome was the achievement of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level < 55 mg/dl.
The aim of the study is to find out the benefit of echocardiography, which is performed by a physican without a cardiological or radiological specialty. In this case the echocardiography is used in the first contact with a patient with chest pain of unclear etiology. Possible benefit is rapid risk stratification of acute non-stemi coronary syndromes and differentiation from other serious conditions, such as pulmonary embolism or aortic dissection.
The aim of the study is the evaluation of the effect of metformin among the patients without diabetes, on the incidence of reintervention, unplanned revascularization, after full percutaneous coronary revascularization as a result of the first episode of the acute coronary syndrome (ACS).
To test whether the polymer-free drug-coated stent (DCS) BioFreedom is noninferior to the biodegradable polymer drug-eluting stent (DES) Ultimaster in terms of 1-year patient-oriented composite endpoint (POCE, composite of all-cause mortality, any MI, or any revascularization) in a setting of 1-month dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) strategy (1-month DAPT followed ticagrelor monotherapy) after acute coronary syndrome.
Our study is planning to evaluate patients with chronic kidney disease who come to the emergency department with chest pain. Estimated GFR (cisGFR) with cystatin and estimated GFR (creaGFR) with creatinine will be calculated. Symptoms, ECG and troponin values of patients will be evaluated for diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome
This two-phase pilot study will test the feasibility of a "combined chronotherapy" (CC) intervention consisting of morning bright light therapy (BLT) and evening blue light blocking (BLB), administered daily for 4 weeks in patients who experienced acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Phase A of the study will be a single-arm open-label study of the home-based CC intervention in 5 post-ACS patients. Phase B of the study will be a parallel-arm randomized clinical trial (RCT) in which 15 post-ACS patients will be randomized (using a 2:1 allocation) to active CC treatment or sleep hygiene education control group. In Phase A and Phase B, the primary aims are study feasibility, acceptability, appropriateness, and usability. In Phase B, the investigator will additionally assess whether the intervention engages its proposed proximal target mechanism - sleep.
A total of 100 patients aged 18-85 years old with a definite diagnosis of ACS were admitted to the Department of Cardiovascular, The First Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University. These patients had fasting serum low-density lipoprotein (LDL-C) >1.8mmol/L (70mg/dL) and were divided into three groups according to the lipid-lowering regimen used: a total of 50 people in the statin-only group received a daily oral medium-dose statin (atorvastatin 20mg qn or rosuvastatin 10mg qn); a total of 30 people in the statin + one injection group per month received oral atorvastatin 20mg qn or rosuvastatin 10mg qn + once a month, subcutaneous injection of 1 injection of PCSK9 inhibitor each time; the remaining 20 people were divided into statin + two injections per month group, oral atorvastatin 20mg qn or rosuvastatin 10mg qn + twice a month, subcutaneous injection of 1 injection of PCSK9 inhibitor each time. We followed up the blood lipid levels of these patients at different time points (one month,three month, six month), including TC, TG, HDL-C, LDL-C,taking the LDL-C reduction ≥50% from the baseline, LDL-C<1.8mmol/L (70mg/dL), and LDL-C<1.4mmol/L (55mg/dL) as the the compliance standard, the blood lipid compliance rates of the three groups at the 6th month of treatment were calculated respectively. The adverse drug reactions of the patients during follow-up were recorded.
Diabetes is an important risk factor of coronary atherosclerosis, and it's well known that platelets of diabetic patients are hyper reactive and so resistant to common antithrombotic therapy. Moreover, in diabetic patients platelets are characterized by high turnover that is responsible of lack of protection by cardioaspirin at common dosage. The aim of our study is to asses the efficacy of different doses of aspirin in diabetic patients with acute coronary syndrome.