View clinical trials related to Arrhythmia.
Filter by:Participants in the Snap arm were instructed to undertake once-day recording and transmission of a 30-second single-lead iECG trace to a secure server, plus additional submissions if symptomatic over a 3-month period. Snap traces were analyzed by an automated analysis software and cardiologists. Clinical review and appropriate care was arranged for those clinically significant arrhythmia. Patients in the RC group were followed up as normal methods including ECG, Holter.
The aim is to evaluate if internet- delivered cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), based on exposure principles and behavioral activation, improves QoL and symptom burden in patients with symptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF) compared to treatment as usual. The study will include 120 patients with symptomatic AF despite optimal medical treatment in accordance with current guidelines.
The aim of the study is to develop and validate a novel esophageal mapping system to improve the diagnostics of cardiac arrhythmias. Using a newly designed esophageal ECG catheter, esophageal ECGs (eECGs) will be recorded in 40 patients during an electrophysiological (EP) study and/or ablation procedure and in 12 healthy volunteers. In parallel acquired intracardiac electrograms will serve as reference for the developed mapping systems accuracy. Additionally, the esophageal mapping system will be compared to that of the standard 12-lead surface ECG in regard to its diagnostic performance.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the reliability of smartphone seismocardiographic detection of AF in comparison to the gold standard of continuous telemetry ECG recording.
Feeling of palpitations with no clear arrhythmia is frequently encountered in clinical practice. The majority of these patients have documented sinus rhythm even while having symptoms. Gastrointestinal association with such symptoms was first described by Ludwig von Roemheld (1871-1938).The investigators thought to investigate the effect of proton pump inhibition in patients with feeling of palpitations but no clear cause.
Compare use of Carelink system - monitoring system - with traditional in-clinic follow up, in patients with implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD)
This study evaluates the role of colchicine in the prevention of atrial fibrillation in patients undergoing open heart surgery. Half of participants will receive colchicine and the other half will not
Higher risk of cardiac and respiratory post-operative events is observed in patients with unrecognised Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA). The efficiency of a simple method of OSA screening by analysing ventilation with measurement of nose pressure and nocturnal hypoxemia (oxygen desaturation index) will be assessed. These sleep respiratory analyses will be compared with the research of arrhythmia, in order to show if they are linked to the hypoxemia events. Aggravation of nocturnal respiratory disorder and higher incidence of cardiac and respiratory postoperative complications will be assessed in OSA patients.
2-3% of emergency department (ED) syncope patients suffer arrhythmia/death within 30 days of disposition (either as an inpatient or at home) and we have recently developed the Canadian Syncope Risk Score (CSRS) to predict these outcomes. Currently, only Holter monitoring is used and is applied a few days later. New and innovative remote (out-of-hospital) external cardiac monitoring technology has made prolonged monitoring possible. The primary objective is to compare diagnostic yield (identification of arrhythmia that requires treatment) for the following two strategies among higher-risk syncope patients discharged home from ED: 15-day external cardiac monitoring (intervention arm) versus 48-hour Holter monitor (control arm) Methods: The study will be a double-blind RCT comparing two different approaches for detecting serious arrhythmias among high-risk ED syncope patients who are discharged home. Cardiophone (live monitor) will be used for the intervention arm and the Mobile Cardiac Telemetry (MCT) device will be used for the control arm and both devices applied prior to ED discharge. For patient safety purposes and to ensure that the patients are similar in both arms, all of the study patients will be monitored for 15 days. MCT will function as a holder for the first 48 hours and this will be used to compare the diagnostic yield in the two study arms. After written informed consent, patients will be randomized 1:1 with allocation concealed by web-based randomization and stratified based on the total CSRS scores. Data collection: patient demographics, medical history, score predictors, device data (failure, false alarms, duration worn), patient symptoms, and comfort. The primary outcome will be the diagnostic yield at 15 days in the two study arms and primary analysis will compare the diagnostic yield by intention to treat principle controlling for the stratification factor. Sample Size: 300 patients per arm (600 total) to detect a 10% difference in diagnostic yield between the arms. Impact: Our study will increase the early identification of patients with serious underlying arrhythmia by combining the CSRS risk tool with innovative remote monitoring technology.
There is growing awareness of the importance of electrical rotors to the maintenance of atrial fibrillation (AF). Recent work in our laboratory has found that AF evolves over time, from rapid, focal activation, next to transitional rotors, and finally to stable, long duration rotors, whose locations are frequently separate from the transitional rotor sites. This project will test the hypothesis that mapping and ablation of the transitional rotors sites may prevent atrial fibrillation from progressing to sustained atrial fibrillation, and therefore increase the AF initiation threshold. The investigators will test this hypothesis during clinically-indicated electrophysiology study prior to ablation of symptomatic AF.