View clinical trials related to Atrial Fibrillation.
Filter by:The aim of the study is to estimate the contribution of abdominal imaging by magnetic resonance Imaging (MRI) and abdominal scanner in the detection of subdiaphragmatic infarction associated to the atrial fibrillation in the cerebral infarction.
The purpose of this study is to see if the study drug metformin will help patients who are overweight and have atrial fibrillation. This study aims to see if metformin helps patients stay in normal sinus rhythm after a catheter ablation. Metformin is investigational for use in patients with atrial fibrillation. Metformin is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in patients with type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. Metformin is used with a proper diet and exercise program to control high blood sugar, and has been shown to help people lose weight. This study aims to look at the effects of metformin on weight loss and heart rhythm in patients with atrial fibrillation.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia with increasing morbidity and mortality. A catheter-based AF ablation technique that isolates pulmonary veins (PV) from the left atrium has been established to disrupt AF. Despite significant development, AF ablation with pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is reported to have a success rate of 40-80% in various AF populations. Persistent AF appears to be more reliant upon fibroblast proliferation and myocyte-fibroblast coupling than paroxysmal AF with obvious implications on its management. Despite the knowledge that fibrotic substrate is responsible for the perpetuation of persistent AF, several ablation techniques targeting these extra-pulmonary veins sites have failed to prove an additional benefit to PVI alone. Nevertheless, two recently developed technologies, aimed at detecting AF substrate with high precision, seem to constitute a potential breakthrough in the management of persistent AF. On one hand, late gadolinium-enhanced MRI (LGE-MRI) is a well-established method to identify fibrosis in the myocardium. Recent reports from a single center have shown that MRI-based left atrial fibrosis detection is able to predict the outcome of the procedure. Hence, targeting lesions seen on LGE-MRI in the setting of persistent AF is an option yet to be explored and compared to the widely adopted, yet suboptimal, PVI. On another hand, a novel ablation method with promising results is focal impulse and rotor modulation (FIRM). Undergoing wide sampling of the atria with spatiotemporal and computational mapping while in AF has identified areas with stable organized rotational electrical activity (rotors). Several studies are under way to prove the reproducibility of rotor mapping, with more groups reporting improved rates of acute and long-term suppression of AF with ablation of FIRM-identified rotors. The SIMPle AF study will be a randomized clinical trial designed to test the hypothesis that ablation tailored to the underlying substrate using either LGE-detected dense scar or rotor anchor sites predicted by computational modeling is superior to anatomic non-tailored PVI ablation in patients with persistent AF. For the present study, the investigators plan to enroll a total of 30 patients.
This is a prospective, multicentre, randomized single blind, parallel group study to be conducted in the UK (2 sites).Approximately 48 patients will be recruited aiming for 40 eligible for randomization. The study is designed to compare the operator's best attempt at WACA completion with and without Rhythmia guidance
This study examines the impact of a breathing training intervention on cardiorespiratory sensations and anxiety in adults with cardiac arrhythmias.
Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia. Some studies shown that systematic screening with electrocardiogram could improve atrial fibrillation detection. No studies are available in nursing home. The goal of this study is to screen atrial fibrillation in patients who live in nursing home.
Arterial thromboembolism constitutes a major risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) requiring antithrombotic therapy. Platelets and microparticles (MPs) are important for hemostasis and thrombosis, their role during AF is not well known. The principal objective of this study is to compare morphologic, functional and proteomics characteristics of blood platelet between AF patients and healthy volunteers.
The aim of the SEARCH-AF trial is to evaluate a novel diagnostic tool for detecting post-operative atrial fibrillation or flutter (POAF/AFL) in cardiac surgical subjects during the early, sub-acute post-operative period. The population includes cardiac surgical subjects who have either developed or are at risk for developing new onset POAF/AFL and who are at risk for stroke, as determined by their CHA2DS2-VASC (congestive heart failure, hypertension, age ≥75 years (2 points), diabetes mellitus, previous stroke/transient ischemic attack (TIA) (2 points), vascular disease, age 65-74 years, sex class (female)) score. These subjects must not have had a history of AF/AFL before cardiac surgery. The intervention group will undergo up to 30 days of continuous cardiac rhythm monitoring with an adhesive, patch-based monitor (Medtronic SEEQ™ mobile cardiac telemetry system or the CardioSTAT (Icentia Inc.) cardiac rhythm monitoring device). The control group will receive usual care, which does not involve planned cardiac rhythm testing within the first 30 days after study randomization. The primary outcome is documentation of sustained atrial fibrillation or flutter within the first 30 days after randomization. In addition, subjects in both groups will undergo 14 days of continuous cardiac rhythm monitoring with the Medtronic SEEQ™ mobile cardiac telemetry system or the CardioSTAT (Icentia Inc.) cardiac rhythm monitoring device at 6±1 months after their index cardiac surgery.
The investigators are evaluating the effect of Pradaxa in comparison to warfarin on bone turnover and bone density in men and women with atrial fibrillation.
In this study, the investigators aim to determine whether non-invasive autonomic modulation decreases inflammation and complications after thoracic surgery. The investigators will test the hypothesis that low-level transcutaneous vagal nerve stimulation (LLVNS) during major thoracic surgery reduces inflammation and complications, particularly postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF). This will be a prospective randomized pilot trial of 200 patients undergoing major thoracic surgery including lobectomy, bilobectomy, or pneumonectomy via either video-assisted thoracoscopic (VAT) or open thoracotomy. Patients will be randomized to receive ether a) LLVNS (n=100) or b) sham LLVNS (n=100) during their procedure. All patients will receive standardized anesthetic, surgical, and post-surgical care. The primary outcome in this study will be time to occurrence of in-hospital POAF, which will be compared between groups using Cox proportional hazards models. Secondary outcomes will be ICU and hospital length of stay, postoperative morbidity, postoperative mortality, and serologic markers of inflammation.