View clinical trials related to Acute Myocardial Infarction.
Filter by:Registry of an interventional Study-proved Strategy (BIC-8) using Copeptin and Troponin for the Early Rule-Out of Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) in Patients with Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) and a low-to intermediate risk profile.
Aim. To develop and examine the effectiveness of an APN-led telehealth rehabilitative programme as a transitional nursing therapeutic on readmission rates and health related outcomes amongst patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) post discharge. Design. Randomized controlled trial with repeated measures. Methodology. A consecutive sampling of 172 patients with AMI will be recruited from a tertiary hospital in Singapore. Participants will be randomised into two groups. The experimental group (ALTRA) will receive APN-led telehealth rehabilitative programme upon discharge in addition to standard care. The control group will receive only standard follow-up care.
Development of myocardial reparative therapy for the treatment of acute ischemic cardiac disease, based on the intracoronary administration of allogeneic Cardiac Stem Cells (CSCs) to ameliorate myocardial cell death and promote cardio-regeneration. The study comprises two phases: 1. Initial dose-escalation open-label safety phase comprising 6 patients. Escalation will start with the Maximum Recommended Safe Dose (MRSD) calculated from Non-Observed Adverse Events Level (NOAEL) and it is expected to finish with the target dose (TD). There will be no placebo group for this initial phase. 2. Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled safety and efficacy phase in which the TD will be injected if the dose-escalation phase is completed successfully.
This is a phase 1 multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, ascending dose study to investigate the pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, and tolerability of CSL112 in adult subjects with moderate renal impairment and in healthy adult subjects with normal renal function.
In acute coronary artery disease, pre-clinical studies have indicated that, during a continuous infusion of intravenous perfluorocarbon containing microbubbles, the ultrasonic power delivered from a diagnostic ultrasound transducer is capable of restoring microcirculatory flow and improving epicardial recanalization rates obtained by conventional therapy, a process known by Sonothrombolysis. The investigators proposed to examine the feasibility, safety and efficacy of such an ultrasound guided approach in 100 patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).
Background: Colchicine is an old well-known venerable drug routinely used in gout attacks for instance. More recnetly it is regularly use in the treatment of pericarditis. It couls exert antiiflammatory effects targeting the adverse inflammation occuring incase of acute myocardial infarction, which is involved in poor outcomes or longer stay at hospital. Endpoints: - Main endpoint: AUC CRP during the initial hospital stay - Secondary endpoints: - Clinical: oucomes - Imaging: ETT, MRI - Biological: various biomarkers Method Randomized, controled, open-labbelled, comparing two parallel arms: conventionnal optimal treatment versus conventionnal optimal treatment + colchicine
Beta-blockers should be administered to all patients with heart failure stage II to IV according to NYHA.Beta-blockers reduce mortality and hospitalizations and improve the operational phase for all categories of patients with heart failure. Since beta-blockers, only carvedilol, metoprolol, bisoprolol and recently nevimpololi have shown these benefits and so, only they have evidence to be provided. Eplerenone is indicated, in addition to conventional therapy, for reducing the risk of cardiovascular mortality and morbidity in stable patients with left ventricular dysfunction (LVEF ≤ 40%) and clinically proven heart failure after recent myocardial infarction.
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.