View clinical trials related to Angina Pectoris.
Filter by:The aim of the present study will be to identify different phenotypes of microvascular dysfunction and their associations with the severity of anginal symptoms assessed through the Seattle Angina Questionnaire(SAQ-7).
The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the feasibility and clinical value of acetylcholine (ACH) rechallenge after intracoronary verapamil +- nitroglycerine in a patient cohort with angina and non-obstructive coronary arteries (ANOCA). The main questions it aims to answer are: - to determine the efficacy of these drugs in treating ACH-induced coronary artery spasm - to determine the efficacy of these drugs in preventing ACH-induced coronary artery spasm The ACH rechallenge will take place during the index coronary function tests in patients with proven ACH-induced vasospastic angina. The study is considered a feasibility study, no control arm is included.
The core hypothesis to be tested is that the radiosurgery of stellate ganglion (left one or both if left-sided without full relief of symptoms) is an effective therapy of refractory angina pectoris in patients with no other therapeutic options - proof of concept study.
The aim of the study is to compare post-interventional fractional flow reserve (FFR) value between optical coherence tomography(OCT)-guided and angiography-guided strategy for treatment of complex coronary lesion.
To demonstrate the feasibility and efficacy of the CS Reducer for the treatment of patients with ischaemia and non-obstructed coronary arteries (INOCA) and coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) and through a nested mechanistic substudy investigate the physiological responses in the coronary microcirculation responsible for changes in myocardial perfusion.
ORBITA-FIRE is a randomised, double-blinded, placebo controlled experimental study that will identify the fractional flow reserve (FFR) and non-hyperemic pressure ratio (NHPR) thresholds that correlate with symptoms of angina for 58 patients measured invasively under experimental conditions.
Ticagrelor-based De-escalation of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting trial (TOP-CABG trial) is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, non-inferiority, parallel controlled trial. The aim of TOP-CABG is to investigate whether de-escalated dual antiplatelet therapy (De-DAPT) is non-inferior to dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) in efficacy on inhibiting great saphenous vein (SVG) graft occlusion and is superior in reducing bleeding events in patients accepting coronary artery bypassing grafting.
Relationship between invasive physiological assessment with FFR and IMR and biological markers as micro-RNA's according to coronary vascular compartiment affected (Group 1: Macrovasculature + / Microvasculature +; Group 2: Macrovasculature + / Microvasculature -; Group 3: Macrovasculature - / Microvasculature +; Group 4: Macrovasculature - / Microvasculature -). Also, biological markers will be related with presence of microvascular spasm or macrovascular spasm (Group 5).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety aspirin in patients with chronic coronary syndromes without revascularization.
The purpose of the study is to identify proteins, metabolites and signal pathways related directly to symptomatic atherosclerosis and to disease progression. In the study, we use residual material from angioplasty catheter balloons and from vascular surgery plus blood samples. It is the hypothesis that material left on the catheter balloons used for angioplasty can be used for proteomics and metabolomics evaluation that will identify inflammation-associated proteins and signaling pathways directly in the diseased vessel. The tissue samples will be collected after the procedure and blood samples will be collected at the procedure plus after 6-12 months. The tissue and blood samples will be analyzed using mass spectrometry methods and a standard panel of biomarkers will also be analyzed using standardized methods. The analyses will include study of inflammation-associated peptides observed in autoinflammation as well as thrombogenic signaling pathways and local expression of biomarkers. The analyses of proteins, metabolites and/or biomarkers will be compared between cases (stable angina, unstable angina/non-STEMI, STEMI and vascular surgery) and controls (procedures not related to coronary artery diseases) to identify molecular processes related directly to symptomatic atherosclerosis and will be associated with disease progression using data from medical journals and National Health registries. The study will recruit 225 patients from Rigshospitalet University Hospital, Copenhagen, and Herlev-Gentofte Hospital.