View clinical trials related to Angina.
Filter by:This study will be an observational registry to investigate the ability of magnetocardiography (MCG) in determining the presence of myocardial ischemia with the absence of obstructive coronary artery disease, by using an invasive reference standard coronary flow reserve (CFR) measured using thermodilution for diagnosis. The device is a magnetocardiography (MCG) scanner named CardioFlux, which is paired with cloud processing software. A CardioFlux scan appointment shall last approximately 15 minutes in duration and include a patient questionnaire following the scan.
This study aims to gather information to what extent patients follow the treatment regimen of low-dose aspirin for primary and secondary prevention of diseases of the heart and blood vessels. Researcher will collect information about the percentage of time a patient has access to the medication, how long patients continue with the medication and of the proportion of patients who switch from dual-antiplatelet therapy (including low-dose aspirin) to a single antiplatelet therapy. The study will make use of secondary healthcare data sources converted in to Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) common data model within the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI) network.
This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, and parallel study. The study is comprised of three main phases: a single-blind placebo run-in qualifying phase lasting about 14 days, a double-blind treatment phase of 12 weeks, and a 2-week follow-up phase. Approximately 18 patients will be enrolled and randomly assigned to receive placebo or 1,000 mg of extended-release Ranolazine twice-daily for 12 weeks to reach 14 evaluable patients at the end of the study.
The primary objective of the study is to determine the role of transdermal vasodilators as an adjunct to parenteral vasodilators in reducing radial artery spasm, improving patient comfort, and post procedure radial artery patency during transradial coronary angiograms and interventions. The study hypothesis is that transdermal vasodilators will increase radial artery size and reduce radial artery spasm as well as improve patient comfort and post procedure radial artery patency. This is a single-center, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study comparing the effect of transdermal preparations of lidocaine + nitroglycerine and lidocaine + placebo on radial artery spasm in patients undergoing transdermal coronary angiograms. Prior to the procedure, each patient will be randomized into either the control arm, lidocaine + placebo, or study arm, lidocaine + nitroglycerine.
The aim of the study is feasibility of complete coronary revascularization with bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) implantation and assessment of treatment outcomes in a group of consecutive patients with stable and unstable angina in Russian population. The hypothesis of this registry study: 1) Complete coronary revascularization with BVS implantation will be feasible to perform in at least 70 percent of patient population with stable and unstable angina qualified for revascularization after coronary angiography, 2) Complete revascularization with BVS is as safe and effective as revascularization with standard BMS (Bare Metal Stent BMS/ Drug Eluting Stent DES stent implantation (published literature comparators in matched populations). Up to 2500 patients will be enrolled in 13 Russian high volume invasive cardiology centres. 12 month clinical observation and 5-year clinical follow-up is expected.
The model by which physicians measure the lack of blood flow in the vessels that supply blood to the heart muscle is called Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR). FFR is the measurement of the pressure across the vessels that supply blood to the heart. These are known as the coronary arteries. This study involves comparing two FFR wires, the St. Jude Medical Pressure Wire (PW) and the ACIST Navvus Microcatheter (MC) to check the accuracy of the devices. FFR allows real-time estimation of the effects of a narrowed vessel, whereas standard angiography can underestimate or overestimate narrowing, because it only visualizes contrast (the different areas of color) inside a vessel.
To compare low dose (1mg) pitavastatin and high dose (4mg) pitavastatin on neointimal hyperplasia and atherosclerosis progression by using optical coherence tomography (OCT) and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) at 12 months follow-up and on clinical adverse cardiovascular events during 3-year follow-up.
The purpose of the Patient and Provider Assessment of Lipid Management Registry (PALM) is to gain a better understanding of physicians' cholesterol medication prescribing practices, patient and physician attitudes and beliefs related to cholesterol management, and current utilization of cholesterol-lowering therapies given the new ACC/AHA guideline recommendations. The PALM Registry hopes to allow for the design of ways to improve cholesterol management and decrease the burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the US.
This is a prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, single-center (North Florida- South Georgia VA Medical Center) study. The study objective is to determine if ranolazine improves angina symptoms at 4 months compared with placebo among stable coronary artery disease patients who have demonstrable myocardial ischemia, but who do not undergo revascularization
This is a simple registry of patients undergoing PCI at hospitals without surgery on-site who were participants in the CPORT-E project. The aim of the registry is simple data collection and reporting to respective State Departments of Health. The registry population consists of patients undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterization for suspected CAD at hospitals without SOS and who require PCI.