View clinical trials related to Acute Myocardial Infarction.
Filter by:This study aims to develop quality improvement strategies and relevant tools focusing on reperfusion therapy in patients with STEMI, and to evaluate their effectiveness via a hospital-level cluster randomized clinical trial, based on the nationally representative collaborative network of over 100 hospitals established in China PEACE retrospective study. In a baseline survey period, through consecutively recruiting all eligible inpatients and collecting relevant medical information, the performance of all participating hospitals before the implementation of the intervention will be assessed. During the following intervention period, 6-10 hospitals that show the strong willingness and ability to collaborate will be selected as "process optimization group". Their clinical pathways and team building will be re-organized for the purpose of quality improvement, and develop individualized treatment strategies and process. Meanwhile, other participating hospitals will be divided into intervention and control groups in a 1:1 ratio, in which the intervention group will take the treatment improvement strategy into implementation, while the control group will maintain the routine practice pattern. All hospitals will consecutively recruit qualified patients in the same method adopted in baseline period. Then the reperfusion rates and other performance measures will be compared among different groups (process optimization, intervention and control).
Patients with heart attacks caused by blocked coronary arteries are usually treated with a technique called primary angioplasty. Although this treatment is very successful it can result in damage to the heart muscle when the artery is opened due to reperfusion injury. Cooling the entire body has been shown to reduce heart muscle damage during heart attacks in some patients but not in others, however it is uncomfortable due to the shivering, expensive and can result in delays in opening the blocked artery. We are investigating a simpler way to cool the heart muscle directly using cooled fluid passed through the catheter without the shortcomings of entire body cooling. This pilot will address safety and feasibility considerations.
Introduction: Plasma fibrinogen levels have been identified as an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases and could have a prognostic value. Bezafibrate decreases fibrinogen levels and also the incidence of major cardiovascular events in primary prevention, but its effects in acute coronary syndrome is unknown. Hypothesis: Bezafibrate effect over statin therapy reduces fibrinogen concentrations, inflammatory response and clinical events, in patients with ST segment elevation ACS and hyperfibrinogenemia. Methods: In a randomized clinical trial, controlled with conventional therapy. Patients with ST elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEAMI) and with fibrinogen concentration >500 mg/dl at 72 h of evolution, were randomly assigned to bezafibrate 400 mg/day (group I n=50) or just conventional therapy (group II n=50). Serum fibrinogen, c reactive protein and cytokines were measured. Clinical end points were recurrence of angina or infarction, left ventricular failure, cardiovascular mortality and combined end points during hospitalization.
This study aims to assess usual walking speed (4-metre gait speed) in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for acute myocardial infarction and to assess whether this can predict future cardiovascular events and death.
Previous trials have demonstrated that the use of physiological assessment of stenosis severity using fractional flow reserve (FFR) is superior to angiographic assessment in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and improves clinical outcome. Despite the clinical utility, FFR is used only in 10-15% of patients today. The main reasons for the low adoption rate of FFR are the prolonged procedural time, Adenosine related discomfort and cost associated with Adenosine. Instantaneous Wave-Free ratio (iFR®) is a novel method to assess coronary lesions for functional significance. The main benefits of the method compared to FFR are that the measurement is instantaneous and does not require Adenosine infusion. Thus, the patient does not experience any discomfort from the measurement and procedural time could be shortened compared to when using FFR. This could potentially increase the adoption rate of physiologic assessment of coronary lesions. The aim of this trial is to compare the clinical outcome of patients assessed by iFR® with patients assessed by FFR. Furthermore, the trial will be conducted as a registry based randomized clinical trial (RRCT) which is a novel strategy to conduct clinical trials. The randomization will occur online in the Swedish angiography and angioplasty registry (SWEDEHEART) using a web based platform.
To evaluate the safety, performance and efficacy of the bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) system in patients with coronary artery disease
This is a 6-month pilot study intended to test the effect of financial incentives on improving medication adherence in AMI patients; to test the effect on adherence of removing financial incentives; and to test the effect on the enrollment rate of modifying recruitment procedures.
Patients presenting with large myocardial infarction and signs of persistent ischemia after successful percutaneous coronary intervention, have a poor prognosis with respect to outcome and development of heart failure in the future. The hypothesis of this study is that in patients in whom persistent ischemia is present, use of intra-aortic balloon pump will be beneficial and improve outcome.
This is a multicenter randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, dose-ranging phase 2b study to investigate the hepatic and renal safety and tolerability of multiple dose administration of two dose levels of CSL112 compared with placebo in subjects with acute myocardial infarction (AMI).
A single-center, prospective case series clinical study consecutively enrolling up to 10 patients with expected duration of 12 months or less. The study objectives are to evaluate retention and the feasibility of integrating therapeutic hypothermia using the ZOLL IVTM System.