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Acute Heart Failure clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Acute Heart Failure.

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NCT ID: NCT04252404 Completed - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

FranceLEVO - Zimino Registry (FZR)

FZR
Start date: February 3, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The French National Authority for Health (Haute Autorité de santé) requested a registry study to obtain post-market surveillance data to describe baseline clinical profiles, management and outcome of patients treated with Zimino®. This study is designed to provide real-life data on the use, safety and clinical outcomes of Zimino® in routine clinical practice in France.

NCT ID: NCT04245605 Completed - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Invasive Coronary Angiography Early in Ischemic Heart Failure

ICE-HF
Start date: April 1, 2010
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To compare the outcomes of patients with acute heart failure who undergo early coronary angiography vs. usual care

NCT ID: NCT04240067 Recruiting - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Multimarker Approach for Acute Dyspnea in Elderly Patients Admitted in the Emergency Department

READ-MA
Start date: June 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Elderly people constitute the largest proportion of emergency department (ED) patients, representing 12% of all ED admissions. The need for diagnostic tests or therapeutic interventions is much greater in this patient population. Cardiovascular diseases and symptoms represent 12% of the causes for ED admission, and patients suffering from cardiovascular disease are those whose ED visit lasts longest. The diagnostic approach in the ED in elderly patients admitted for acute dypsnoea is complex, and early identification of acute left-sided heart failure (ALSHF) is vital as it has an impact on prognosis. The clinical signs are difficult to interpret, and are non-specific, particularly at the acute phase and in elderly or obese patients. Indeed, some authors have reported up to 50% of diagnostic errors in elderly patients. Measure of the blood concentration of a natriuretic peptide allows a quick diagnosis. However, peptides alone suffer from several limitations, particularly in situations that are often encountered in elderly patients, such as sepsis, renal failure, acute coronary syndrome, pulmonary embolism, chronic respiratory failure, atrial fibrillation and high body mass index. Diagnostic performance deteriorates with increasing age, and there is a significant increase in this grey-zone in patients aged ≥75 years. In critical situations in elderly patients, assessment of natriuretic peptides serve mainly to rule out a diagnosis of left heart failure. Some authors have studied other biomarkers showing their performance in the diagnosis of ALSHF. These are biomarkers involved in remodeling and myocardial fibrosis (ST2, Galectin-3) or involved in myocardial injury (High-sensitivity Troponin-I). Therefore, a combined "multimarker" approach could improve the diagnostic performance of ALSHF. READ (NCT02531542) is a diagnostic study including patients over the age of 75 admitted to acute dyspnea in the ED, to demonstrate the superiority of an ultrasound protocol (the READ protocol) on NT-proBNP in the ALSHF diagnosis. The hypothesis is that the diagnostic accuracy of a multimarker diagnostic approach, namely the READ-MA method, combining NT-proBNP, High-sensitivity Troponin-I, ST2 and Galectin-3 would be superior to that of NT-proBNP assessment for the diagnosis of ALSHF in elderly patients (≥75 years) admitted to the ED.

NCT ID: NCT04174794 Terminated - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Investigating Reduction of aCute heArt Failure Readmission With Lung UltraSound-preliminary Trial

Pre-IcarUS
Start date: October 8, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In Switzerland 15% of discharged patients are readmitted within 30 days. Acute heart failure is the leading cause of hospital admission and one of the most frequent reasons for re-admission, mainly because of congestion-driven symptoms. Residual congestion is noted in 10%-15% of patients at discharge and is associated with an increased risk of re-admission and mortality. Lung ultrasound outperforms both chest X‐ray and physical examination in detection of lung congestion. Several semiquantitative scanning protocols exist for quantifying congestion. The aim of this study is to compare for the first time two widely used lung ultrasound protocols, one exhaustive (28-points) and one simplified (8-points), in real-time settings. The focus is placed on reproducibility (expert-beginner interobserver concordance), feasibility (time consumption for images acquisition and interpretation) and performance (detection of B-lines clearing) of both scores. Semi-quantitative method is expected to have better feasibility with similar reproducibility and performance.

NCT ID: NCT04163588 Recruiting - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Sequential Nephron Blockade in Acute Heart Failure

Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Background - Volume overload is an important clinical target in acute heart failure management (AHF), typically addressed using loop diuretics. An important and challenging subset of heart failure patients exhibit fluid overload despite significant doses of loop diuretics. One approach to overcome loop diuretic resistance is the addition of a thiazide-type diuretic to produce diuretic synergy via "sequential nephron blockade". Although potentially able to induce diuresis in patients otherwise resistant to high doses of loop diuretics, this strategy has not been subjected to large-scale clinical trials to establish safety and clinical efficacy. Methods - Our trial is a multicentric, double blind, randomized clinical study, aiming to recruit 310 patients with AHF and clinically evident volume overload. Study participants are randomized to receive a standard diuretic therapy (intravenous loop diuretics as recommended by current guidelines plus placebo) or SNB therapy (loop diuretics plus oral metolazone at the dose of 5/10 mg once daily) on top of standard medical therapy. Mineralocorticoid antagonists will be used in association with the two regimens according to blood potassium level and kidney function at the discretion of the treating physician. The primary endpoint is defined as the change in the serum creatinine level and the change in weight, considered both as a bivariate response and with their single components, between the time of randomization and 72 hours after randomization. Secondary endpoints include global well-being and dyspnoea assessed by a visual-analogue scale, changes in body weight and net fluid loss, proportion of patients free from congestion, treatment failure, changes in biomarker levels and the composite of death, rehospitalization, or an emergency room visit within 60 days, as well as the composite of total number of days hospitalized or death during the 60 days after randomization.

NCT ID: NCT04146701 Recruiting - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Metabolomics and Microbiomics in Cardiovascular Diseases

MEMORIA
Start date: February 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

"MEtabolomics and MicrObiomics in caRdIovAscular diseases Mannheim (MEMORIAM) " is a single-center, prospective and observational study investigating to identify disease-specific metabolic, respectively microbiomic, patterns of patients with high-risk cardiovascular diseases. High-risk cardiovascular diseases comprise patients suffering from acute heart failure (AHF), ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), sepsis, septic shock, ischemic and non-ischemic cardiomyopathy.

NCT ID: NCT04062760 Not yet recruiting - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Safety and Efficacy of Early, seQUential Oral dIuretic Nephron blockAde In Acute Heart Failure

SEEQUOIA-AHF
Start date: December 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The SEEQUOIA-AHF (Safety and Efficacy of Early, seQUential oral dIuretic nephron blockAde in Acute Heart Failure) trial is a multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel-arm trial assessing the impact of early sequential nephron blockade (i.e. a regimen based on the combination of four oral diuretics with different sites of action along the nephron at low doses) compared to a conventional approach with a high-dose loop diuretic in the treatment of congestion in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure (AHF). In this study, after 24-72 hours of high-dose intravenous furosemide started at the time of hospital admission, patients admitted with AHF will be randomized to open-label oral treatment with either low-dose sequential nephron blockade or high-dose furosemide for 96 hours. The primary end-point will be the bivariate change in body weight and serum creatinine value at 96 hours since randomization. Secondary endpoints will include clinical (e.g., total change in body weight during hospitalization, change in dyspnea score at 96 hours since randomization, 30-day readmission rate) and laboratory (e.g., change in BNP or NT-proBNP at discharge vs randomization) parameters, and safety (e.g., change in serum creatinine value at discharge versus randomization and up to 30 days from discharge) issues.

NCT ID: NCT04000061 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Heart Failure-USB: Prediction and Progression

Start date: June 13, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This retrospective cohort study is to identify triggers of heart failure (HF) development and drivers of HF progression as well as the underlying cardiac disease (phenotype) to identify patients at risk and predict the clinical course of the disease. Data of patients who were hospitalized during the years 2010-2023 with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and/ or with acute heart failure (AHF) will be collected and analyzed. In a subgroup cohort efficacy and safety of digoxin in patients with acute heart failure triggered by tachyarrhythmia will be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT03999138 Recruiting - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

MRI Assessment of Pulmonary Edema in Acute Heart Failure

MAP-AHF
Start date: January 2, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Researchers are testing a more accurate way to measure how much fluid is in the lungs (also called pulmonary edema, or "increased lung water") in people with Heart Failure (HF) using MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging). There is little known about the exact level of lung water in patients with AHF or how these levels change from the time of hospital admission to discharge. The purpose of this research study is to measure the lung water in patients hospitalized for HF, to determine the change in lung water over the course of hospitalization and treatment, and to find out if lung water levels can predict if patients are higher or lower risk for returning to the hospital or dying from heart failure.

NCT ID: NCT03903198 Completed - Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Care Pathways of Acute Heart Failure Patients: Impact on In-hospital Mortality.

Start date: June 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigators conducted a prospective observational study to describe the different pre-hospital and in-hospital pathways of patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and their association with in-hospital mortality.