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Arrhythmias, Cardiac clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Arrhythmias, Cardiac.

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NCT ID: NCT05966922 Completed - Heart Arrhythmia Clinical Trials

Transcutaneous Electrical Stimulation & Sinoatrial Node Function

TENS&HR
Start date: July 13, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TES) is used in clinical practice to diagnose or treat a diverse range of medical conditions for over a century. Although the benefits of TES are well known, its potential side effects on the heart have not been convincingly clarified. This study will test whether TES has any effect on the sinoatrial node (SAN).

NCT ID: NCT05965375 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Ventricular Arrythmia

Risk Stratification Value of Biomarkers in Patients With Ventricular Arrhythmias

FUTURE
Start date: December 31, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigation of biomarkers for immune status and metabolic state, as well as host microbiota composition, in patients with ventricular arrhythmias before and after radiofrequency ablation, can provide new insights for specific and personalized treatment. This can help establish early prediction and prognosis models and provide a basis for clinically effective diagnosis and treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05964660 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Ventricular Arrythmia

Echocardiography-based Motion Integration and Management for Substrate Characterization and STAR Therapy in Ventricular Tachycardias

MATRIX-VT
Start date: August 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Prospective, observational, single center, pilot study to analyze the feasibility of motion and structural data integration in patients with ventricular arrhythmia by means of artificial intelligence for improved arrhythmogenic substrate characterization and motion management during stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation.

NCT ID: NCT05961163 Terminated - Stroke Clinical Trials

Chronical Illness-related Limitations of the Ability to Cope With Rising Temperatures: an Observational Study

CLIMATE
Start date: July 24, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The CLIMATE Observational Study examines to what extent chronically ill patients experience adverse health effects because of heat and whether the patients' specific efforts, somatosensory amplification, self-efficacy, health literacy and commitment to the GP, degree of urbanisation of the patients' administration district and characteristics of the patients' neighborhood are associated with these effects.

NCT ID: NCT05957315 Not yet recruiting - Arrhythmia Clinical Trials

Mobile Cardiac Outpatient Telemetry for Unexplained Syncope

Start date: September 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study seeks to provide evidence that use of Philips mobile cardiac outpatient telemetry (MCOT) devices may improve patient care for patients who present to emergency departments (EDs) with syncope, which is a temporary loss of consciousness also known as fainting or who present experiencing a near temporary loss of consciousness (near syncope). It is set up as a random controlled trial, which means research participants will be randomly assigned to receiving the device or usual care. Patients 50 years or older who come to the ED of Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital will be screened by study team members for unexplained syncope or near syncope across three ED dispositions: hospital admission, emergency department clinical decision unit admission (ED CDU) and emergency department. After consent, subjects will be enrolled and randomized, via REDCap randomization, in the study. At the time of subject discharge the MCOT device will be placed on the chest for the arm of intervention patients (for subjects who were admitted, the research study team will follow the patient's clinical course and placement of the device will occur at discharge); subjects will also receive brief instruction on the care and maintenance of the device and a patient education guide. The research team will contact the subjects for a telephone follow up at 14 and 30 days post-enrollment. The study will establish the efficacy of mobile cardiac outpatient telemetry in comparison to observation telemetry. Research objectives are to 1) Measure the time to medical intervention in patients with unexplained syncope or near syncope fitted with a Philips MCOT at the time of hospital discharge compared to patients treated with usual care for unexplained syncope or near syncope; and 2) Measure the time to arrhythmia diagnosis in patients with unexplained syncope or near syncope fitted with a Philips MCOT at the time of hospital discharge compared to patients treated with usual care for unexplained syncope or near syncope.

NCT ID: NCT05913375 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ventricular Tachycardia

Stereotactic Management of Arrhythmia - Radiosurgery Treatment and Evaluation of Response in Ventricular Tachycardia

SMARTER-VT
Start date: July 24, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Prospective single-arm study investigating the efficacy and safety of non-invasive cardiac radiosurgery for the treatment of ventricular tachycardia (VT) with reduced dose of radiation (20 Gy). The efficacy and safety outcome measures will be compared with historical control - patients treated within the SMART-VT study (NCT04642963) with a single dose of 25 Gy to test the hypothesis that reduced dose of radiation is similarly effective in terms of reduction of VT burden.

NCT ID: NCT05907863 Completed - Clinical trials for Heart Rhythm Disorder

Intracardiac Echocardiography Guided vs. Electroanatomical Mapping System Guided Slow Pathway Ablation in Patients With Atrioventricular Nodal Reentrant Tachycardia

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Study protocol To prepare for the electrophysiologic study, antiarrhythmic drugs were discontinued at least five half-lives before the procedure and were under conscious sedation using midazolam ± fentanyl while fasting. ICE-guided ablation group In patients randomized to ICE-guided ablation group, catheter placement was initially performed using fluoroscopy guidance, after local anesthesia. A decapolar steerable catheter was placed in the coronary sinus (CS), a quadripolar electrode catheter was positioned in the right ventricular apex and an ablation catheter was inserted to record the His bundle electrogram. Twelve-lead electrocardiogram and intracardiac electrograms were recorded and saved on a digital recording system using a band pass filter of 30 to 500 Hz. Electrical stimulation techniques were used to test atrioventricular nodal conduction and induce AVNRT, with the S2 coupling interval being gradually shortened after each drive-train until tachycardia was induced, AV conduction block occurred, or the atrial refractory period was reached. If tachycardia was not inducible, isoprenaline infusion was given to increase the heart rate by at least 20%, and the same stimulation protocol was repeated during both the infusion and washout phases. The diagnosis of AVNRT was made using established electrophysiologic criteria and pacing maneuvers. This involved assessing the A-(H)-V response after ventricular overdrive pacing, with an SA-VA interval greater than 85 ms, and a corrected postpacing interval minus tachycardia cycle length greater than 110 ms. After confirmation of the diagnosis of AVNRT through the diagnostic EP study, the quadripolar electrode catheter was removed and replaced with an 8F ICE catheter for mapping and SP ablation. The echo-transducer was positioned in the low right atrium at the 6 o'clock position and rotated clockwise towards the septum to allow for visualization of the anatomic landmarks. The proximity of the ablation catheter to the compact AV node was determined by the distance from the aortic valve, which marks the recording site of a proximal His potential. In cases of ineffective ablation, the catheter was moved closer to the aortic valve, but always maintaining a distance of at least 0.5 cm, and RF application was attempted again. RF energy was delivered starting just below the CS with a power output of 30 W and a preset temperature of 55°C. Effective applications were continued for 30 to 60 s and considered successful when junctional rhythm appeared. RF application was immediately halted if there was catheter displacement, sudden impedance rise, prolongation of PR interval, anterograde AV or retrograde VA block. Electroanatomical mapping system -guided ablation group An ablation catheter was inserted into the heart to create an anatomical map by CARTO of the right atrium after local anesthesia, and the location of the His bundle was tagged. Decapolar and quadripolar diagnostic catheters were positioned thereafter into appropriate position as described above. After confirming the diagnosis of AVNRT, mapping of the slow pathway was started by NAVISTAR catheter guided by EAMS and aiming at an atrial-to-ventricular electrogram amplitude ratio of 1:3-1:5. If the ablation endpoint was not reached after 8 radiofrequency (RF) applications, patients in the EMAS-guided ablation group were allowed to crossover to an ICE-guided procedure. The ablation procedure was deemed successful if, following a 20-minute waiting period, the arrhythmia failed to be induced and there were no instances of more than one echo beat observed, both in the presence and absence of isoprenaline. The procedure time was measured from the initial femoral puncture until the withdrawal of the catheters. The mapping plus ablation time was calculated from the start of the SP mapping until the end of the last attempted ablation. Fluoroscopy time, radiation dose, and dose-area product (DAP) were automatically recorded by the fluoroscopy system. The ablation data, including the total number of RF applications, sum of delivered RF energy in Watts, and the total ablation time in seconds, were calculated and stored by the EP recording system (CardioLab, GE Healthcare).

NCT ID: NCT05899959 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

REmote CArdiac MOnitoring by the Corsano CardioWatch 287-2 Evaluation Study

RECAMO
Start date: June 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In this study, a wristband that monitors hearth rhythm and blood pressure is assessed in free living conditions. Two groups of patients are being recruited: patients receiving an EKG holter and patients receiving an automatic blood pressure monitor. Patients wear the wristband for 28 days. During this time, the number of atrial fibrillation episodes detected by the wristband is being counted, which is to be compared with the number of episodes detected by the holter. Also, blood pressure is measured continuously, which is to be compared with daily blood pressure measurements using a conventional blood pressure cuff.

NCT ID: NCT05890716 Recruiting - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

AI-powered ECG Analysis Using Willemâ„¢ Software in High-risk Cardiac Patients (WILLEM)

WILLEM
Start date: April 4, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

WILLEM is a multi-center, prospective and retrospective cohort study. The study will assess the performance of a cloud-based and AI-powered ECG analysis platform, named Willemâ„¢, developed to detect arrhythmias and other abnormal cardiac patterns. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. A new AI-powered ECG analysis platform can automatice the classification and prediction of cardiac arrhythmic episodes at a cardiologist level. 2. This AI-powered ECG analysis can delay or even avoid harmful therapies and severe cardiac adverse events such as sudden death. The prerequisites for inclusion of patients will be the availability of at least one ECG record in raw data, along with patient clinical data and evolution data after more than 1-year follow-up. Cardiac electrical signals from multiple medical devices will be collected by cardiology experts after obtaining the informed consent. Every cardiac electrical signal from every subject will be reviewed by a board-certified cardiologist to label the arrhythmias and patterns recorded in those tracings. In order to obtain tracings of relevant information, >95% of the subjects enrolled will have rhythm disorders or abnormal ECG's patterns at the time of enrollment.

NCT ID: NCT05890664 Recruiting - Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trials

Colchicine After Electrocardioversion for Atrial Fibrillation

COLECTRO-AF
Start date: April 14, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to investigate whether a 3 month treatment course of low-dose Colchicine decreases the recurrence of Atrial fibrillation (AF) after electrocardioversion (ECV) in patients with AF.