View clinical trials related to Cardiac Arrythmias.
Filter by:Heart problems are amongst the most common physical illnesses in children and young people (CYP). They can be present from birth or develop as CYP get older and are linked to increased physical and psychological difficulties overprotection from caregivers and healthcare providers and reduced quality of life. While adults are offered exercise classes and lifestyle advice after a heart problem, CYP with heart problems are not. Improving health behaviours in people with heart problems is vital, improves quality of life and reduces additional illnesses (i.e obesity, diabetes). Approximately 1 in 3 CYP with heart problems have anxiety and/or depression so it is also important to support their mental health. One way to do this is to develop and test the acceptability and feasibility of a trial of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) consisting of exercise with mental health support for CYP. The aim is to develop and test the feasibility and acceptability of a trial of a cardiac rehabilitation programme for CYP.
It is a prospective, randomized and double-blind clinical trial involving an invasive technique for isolation of pulmonary veins (PVAC gold) in relation to clinical treatment during an one year of segment. The patients included have paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (aged 65 years and older) refractory to antiarrhythmic treatments that do not have structural and / or ischemic heart diseases. This trial employed quality of life scores prior to the study and during the sixth and twelfth month of the segment, electrocardiograms and holter of 24 hours. The proposed imaging tests was the transesophageal echocardiogram before each procedure. The cerebral MRI was performed in the 24 hours post invasive procedure and Angio-tomography of the pulmonary veins in the 6-month segment.
This study will compare the reliability and timeliness in data transmission of the Abbott Confirm Rx™ loop recorder with the Medtronic Reveal LINQ™ loop recorder.
Relationship between carbetocin dose on transmural dispersion of repolarization (TDR).
Identifying the correct arrhythmia at the time of a clinic event including cardiac arrest is of high priority to patients, healthcare organizations, and to public health. Recent developments in artificial intelligence and machine learning are providing new opportunities to rapidly and accurately diagnose cardiac arrhythmias and for how new mobile health and cardiac telemetry devices are used in patient care. The current investigation aims to validate a new artificial intelligence statistical approach called 'convolution neural network classifier' and its performance to different arrhythmias diagnosed on 12-lead ECGs and single-lead Holter/event monitoring. These arrhythmias include; atrial fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardia, AV-block, asystole, ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation, and will be benchmarked to the American Heart Association performance criteria (95% one-sided confidence interval of 67-92% based on arrhythmia type). In order to do so, the study approach is to create a large ECG database of de-identified raw ECG data, and to train the neural network on the ECG data in order to improve the diagnostic accuracy.
This prospective multicenter registry study aims to determine whether device-detected sleep-disordered breathing events are associated increased risk of cardiac arrhythmias or other cardiovascular outcomes.
This is a prospective, controlled, comparative clinical trial of a new ECG monitoring system CardioSenseSystem prior CE marking. The aim of the study is to demonstrate that the CardioSenseSystem's cable-free ECG monitoring system (investigational device) is equivalent or better than traditional and accepted industry standard for cable-based ECG monitoring system (control device). In this study accepted industry standard is Philips Intellivue. In order to investigate this, the study will measure ECG monitoring interruptions, management time and alarm performance. The study population will consist of sixty (60) adult subjects requiring ECG and that are fulfilling the eligibility criteria for study participation. The subjects will be using both the investigational device and the control device simultaneous for measuring data loss, management time and alarm function up to 24 hours.
This study aims to compare the clinical profile and outcomes of acute coronary syndrome patients with diabetes and without diabetes.
studies suggest that off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery is associated with improved outcomes when compared to on-pump coronary artery bypass. many studies have shown that off-pump coronary bypass surgery reduces patient morbidity and mortality. manipulation of the coronary arteries during cardiac surgery can stimulate the adjacent post-ganglionic sympathetic fibers and mimic stellate ganglion stimulation ,stellate ganglion block (SGB) can interrupt this reflex by decreasing the efferent cervical sympathetic outflows.
The objective of CAREBANK study is to establish definitive relationships with human cardiac samples and clinical phenotypes in patients undergoing cardiac procedures. Specifically, the investigators aim at comparing atrial phenotypes from atrial fibrillation patients and controls. The work consists of three broad categories: A) role of atrial cardiomyopathy in atrial fibrillation; B) genetic defects predisposing to atrial fibrillation; and C) the role of inflammation in atrial fibrillation.