View clinical trials related to Arrhythmia.
Filter by:The purpose of this research study is to learn about arrhythmia detection in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). For several years patients with OSA have an increased likelihood of having irregular heartbeats. This study will determine how often patients with OSA have irregular heartbeats. This study will also define which OSA patients are most likely to have irregular heartbeats. The participant is being asked to be in the study because the participant has been diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA).
The aim is to evaluate if internet- delivered CBT, based on behavioral activation and exposure principles, improves wellbeing and QoL in symptomatic AF patients.The study will include 30 patients with symptomatic AF despite optimal medical treatment in accordance with current guidelines.
Life expectancy of children with congenital heart disease (CHD) has increased dramatically during the past years, due to the successes of cardiac surgery. Nearly all of these children with CHD can be operated at young age and more than 90% reach adulthood. However, many adults with CHD are life-long affected by cardiac events, particularly arrhythmias and heart failure, putting them at risk of premature death. These events have a large impact on quality of life of patients and their families and merit life-long hospital visits in a medical center specialized in adult CHD. Especially for adults with CHD patient care with a smartphone is suited because of their young age and chronic condition. So far, data are lacking on smartphone interventions in patients with CHD.
This is a randomized trial of a best-practice alert delivered via the electronic medical record (Apex) to physicians on the Medicine service at UCSF Medical Center over a six month period. The alert notifies physicians that their order for continuous cardiac monitoring (telemetry) for a given patient has exceeded the duration recommended by national guidelines and offers them the opportunity to discontinue monitoring if they feel it is clinically appropriate. Physicians will be randomized to either receive the BPA or not, with the anticipation that physicians in the intervention arm will discontinue unnecessary telemetry.
Prospective observational multicentric study evaluating the efficacy of considering unipolar signal modification during radio frequency catheter ablation of patients with symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in France between November 2013 and January 2015. All procedures were conducted according to the standard clinical care and current guidelines. Pulmonary vein isolation was guided according to force (at least 10 grams) and application vector (perpendicular to the wall) developed until the atrial unipolar electrogram recording became a complete positive signal. Patients were discharged from hospital free of any anti-arrhythmic drugs. Recurrence of arrhythmias at 12 months (primary outcome) was assessed by continuous 48-hour Holter at 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months post-catheter ablation.
Sedation for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation should be performed to achieve analgesia, immobilization, and maintenance of airway. Various anesthetic agents such as propofol, dexmedetomidine, and midazolam were investigated to achieve this goal. However, propofol and midazolam causes respiratory depression and dexmedetomidine occasionally accompanies hypotension or hypertension and bradycardia. Therefore, anesthetic agent that does not induce respiratory depression with stable hemodynamics is needed. Propacetamol (Denogan®, Yungjin, Seoul, Korea) is injectable prodrug of acetaminophen and 1st line drug for fever and pain. In a previous study, paracetamol reduced morphine consumption after surgery. And paracetamol does not cause respiratory depression. Thus, the investigators hypothesized that addition of propacetamol to previously used sedatives midazolam-remifentanil will reduce opioid consumption during the catheter ablation. Therefore, the investigators designed this study to investigate the role of addition of propacetamol to previous used midazolam-remifentanil sedation. This study will compare the opioid consumption and respiratory effect of propacetamol with placebo-control for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation.
Purpose: Heart Failure (HF) is a clinical multifactorial syndrome, it can cause arrhythmias for which international guidelines suggest the implantation of an implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD). The educational nursing program would improve clinical outcomes in patients with HF and ICD like control their sickness, known and acknowledge symptoms, improve their skills to self-care. The main aim of this study is to assess how much the nursing-therapeutics skills and an educational intervention, in patients with HF during the follow-up period after the implantation of ICD reduces clinical costs, re-hospitalizations, and mortality at 180 days. Methods: The investigators start a multicenter randomized clinical trial. The sample is made of 128 subjects (64 patients treatment group and 64 control group). The investigators measured the self-care level administering to HF patients the "Self-Care of Heart Failure Index (SCHFI) v. 6.2", and the self-perception of own life quality using a Numeric Rating Scale from 0 to 100. Secondary outcomes recorded are i) the numbers of accesses to the ED (Emergency Department) and/or hospitalizations during the follow-up period, ii) mortality rate due to HF, and iii) infection rate of the device pocket. Data Analysis: Categorical variables will be presented in terms of frequencies and percentages. The statistical power was fixed at the 80%. Data will be considered significant for a p-value ≤ 0.05. The Cox proportional hazards model will be used to analyze mortality in subjects involved in the educational program.
The purpose of the RIO 2 International study is to provide clinical and economic evidence to support moving the LINQ™ insertion procedure outside these traditional locations within the hospital, referred to as "out-of-cathlab".
The primary purpose of the RIO 2 study is to demonstrate that when the Reveal LINQ™ insertable cardiac monitoring (ICM) system that records subcutaneous ECG insertion procedure performed in the in-office setting is as safe as LINQ™ insertions performed in the traditional hospital setting (operating room, cardiac catheterization or electrophysiology (EP) laboratory).
Septic shock is a condition that is marked by severe infection causing hypotension requiring vasopressors to maintain adequate perfusion to vital organs. The Surviving Sepsis campaign, an international organization formed for the purpose of guiding the management of sepsis and septic shock, currently recommends norepinephrine as the first-choice vasopressor for septic shock. Phenylephrine, a vasopressor FDA-approved for use in septic shock, is recommended as an alternative vasopressor when septic shock is complicated by tachyarrhythmia to mitigate cardiac complications. This recommendation is based solely on experience with no scientific evidence to support this recommendation. The investigators will conduct an open-label randomized controlled trial (RCT) directly comparing phenylephrine and norepinephrine, two FDA-approved vasopressors that are both used in clinical practice for the management of septic shock. The investigators will perform this study with a population of patients that have septic shock to complete the following aims: Aim 1: Determine the incidence of tachyarrhythmias. Aim 2: Determine which vasopressor, phenylephrine or norepinephrine, is associated with a lower heart rate. Aim 3: Determine which vasopressor, phenylephrine or norepinephrine, is associated with a higher incidence of new tachyarrhythmias. Aim 4: Determine which vasopressor, phenylephrine or norepinephrine, is associated with less time in tachyarrhythmia. Aim 5: Determine which vasopressor, phenylephrine or norepinephrine, is associated with fewer complications, including cardiac complications. The investigators hypothesize that in this setting, phenylephrine will improve the management of septic shock when used as a "first choice" vasopressor by: 1. Decreasing the mean heart rate 2. Decreasing the incidence of new tachyarrhythmias 3. Decreasing the amount of time spent in tachyarrhythmia for patients who develop new onset and recurrent tachyarrhythmias 4. Decreasing the number of cardiac complications