Clinical Trials Logo

Angina, Stable clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Angina, Stable.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT00281346 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Myocardial Infarction

Non-invasive Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Stenoses by Doppler Echocardiography

Start date: December 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Non-invasive evaluation of patients with stable angina and unstable coronary syndromes with transthoracic Doppler echocardiography to evaluate presence of significant coronary stenoses. Blinded evaluation and comparison with coronary angiography: presence and location of stenoses, and head to head comparison of clinical value and patient classification.

NCT ID: NCT00263263 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

RRISC Study: Reduction of Restenosis In Saphenous Vein Grafts With Cypher Sirolimus-Eluting Stent.

Start date: September 2003
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Context: Sirolimus-eluting-stents have improved the benefits of percutaneous interventions in native coronary arteries reducing the occurrence of restenosis and repeated revascularization, however saphenous vein grafts have been always excluded form randomized trials. Objective: To evaluate the angiographic and clinical impact of sirolimus-eluting-stents with respect to bare-metal-stents in degenerated vein grafts. Design: Double-blind randomized controlled non-industry-sponsored trial. Setting: A single-center tertiary-care referral hospital. Patients: All patients are randomly allocated to sirolimus-eluting-stent implantation or the corresponding bare-metal-stent. All patients are followed clinically and repeated angiographic follow-up is performed in all at 6-months. Main outcome measure: Primary end-point is 6-months angiographic in-stent late loss. Secondary end-points include: binary angiographic in-stent and in-segment restenosis, intravascular-ultrasound-measured neo-intimal hyperplasia volume and all the clinical events (death, myocardial infarction, target-lesion and target-vessel revascularization).

NCT ID: NCT00202566 Completed - Angina Pectoris Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety of Ivabradine on Top of Atenolol in Stable Angina Pectoris

ASSOCIATE
Start date: June 2005
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

To test whether ivabradine when given in combination with atenolol is able to improve the exercise tolerance of patients with stable angina pectoris

NCT ID: NCT00184444 Completed - Angina Pectoris Clinical Trials

Effect of Increased Oxygenation in the Air During Endurance Training in Stable Angina Pectoris Patients

Start date: September 2004
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study investigates whether endurance training breathing 100% oxygen gives a additional improvement of maximal oxygen uptake in stable Angina Pectoris patients, compared to training without extra oxygen supplementation. In addition work economy, stroke volume and cardiac perfusion is measured. The hypothesis of the study is that increased oxygenation of the air increases performance, stroke volume, work economy and cardiac perfusion.

NCT ID: NCT00143195 Completed - Myocardial Ischemia Clinical Trials

Amlodipine vs Nitrates Study in Patients With Chronic Stable Angina

ANISSA
Start date: April 2001
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The objective of study is to compare the anti-ischemic efficacy and safety profiles of once daily amlodipine or isosorbide-5-mononitrate in the treatment of stable asymptomatic and symptomatic myocardial ischemia

NCT ID: NCT00139802 Completed - Clinical trials for Ischemic Heart Disease

DANish Multicenter STENT Trial

Start date: April 1997
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study was to evaluate procedural and late outcome of coronary artery stenting using 2 different unmounted stents

NCT ID: NCT00131183 Completed - Angina Pectoris Clinical Trials

Testosterone Therapy on Angina Threshold and Atheroma in Patients With Chronic Stable Angina

Start date: September 2005
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to address the following questions on the effects of testosterone therapy in men with coronary ischaemia: - Does the anti-anginal effect persist long term? Many of the published studies are acute single dose trials and none of the chronic studies have assessed patients formally beyond a few months. The investigators' earlier studies were limited to 3 months. - Does testosterone therapy in men affect the levels of measurable atheroma? There is currently no in-vivo human evidence that androgen therapy inhibits or reduces levels of atheroma, although there is abundant evidence in animals to suggest a potential improvement. This study addresses the two issues and would be of one-year duration but would be the longest trial of testosterone therapy in men with cardiovascular disease. The primary endpoint is the change in time to ST- segment depression of > 1mm during exercise testing.