View clinical trials related to Cardiac Valve Disease.
Filter by:Rationale: Patients with mitral valve insufficiency suffer from left atrial remodeling. Atrial fibrosis is part of this remodeling process. The presence of atrial fibrosis is associated with adverse events. Currently, mitral valve repair surgery is the ultimate treatment for severe primary mitral valve insufficiency. The main indications and timing for surgery are severe mitral valve insufficiency with symptoms or left ventricular dysfunction. However, the role of atrial fibrosis in this process remains undetermined despite its well-recognized clinical implications. Characterization of atrial fibrosis patterns in mitral valve insufficiency patients might be potentially valuable for the indication and timing of mitral valve repair surgery in order to improve clinical outcomes. To date, however, mitral valve insufficiency patients suffering from left atrial remodeling have hardly been studied using these new imaging techniques. Therefore, the investigators intend to combine advanced cardiac MRI and post-processing techniques prior to and after mitral valve repair surgery to gain more insight in the clinical implications of atrial fibrosis in this patient population. It is hypothesized that the atrial fibrosis surface area paradoxically will increase after mitral valve surgery because of global shrinkage of the left atrium caused by the reversed remodeling process. As a consequence, more frequently atrial fibrosis related events including (paroxysmal) atrial fibrillation, may be observed in these patients. Objective: To assess the effects of (reduced) volume overload on the left atrial wall texture (presence, amount and location of atrial fibrosis) and associated geometry and function in patients with mitral valve insufficiency, prior to and after mitral valve repair surgery. Study design: Single center pilot study. Study population: The research population consists of mitral valve insufficiency patients scheduled for elective surgical mitral valve repair (N=20) according to the current European guideline criteria.
The purpose of this study is to assess the influence of extracorporeal circulation during cardiac surgery on the optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) after the surgery.
NOTACS aims to determine if prophylactic use of high-flow nasal therapy (for a minimum of 16 hours after tracheal extubation, inclusive of up to one hour off randomised therapy for transfers around the hospital and/or physio mobilisation) increases days at home in the first 90 days after surgery, for adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery who are at high risk of postoperative pulmonary complications. The study also incorporates a health economic analysis to estimate the incremental cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of HFNT versus standard oxygen therapy at 90 days, from the view-point of the public sector, NHS and patients.
In cardiac surgery patients with CPB-induced dilutional coagulopathy, ultrafiltration (UF) was applied to reduce free water and concentrate all blood components before the weaning from CPB. The impact of UF on the clot strength is determined by analyzing the changes of maximal clot formation in EXTEM assay (MCF-EXTEM) in the ROTEM test in patients who underwent elective cardiac valve surgery in KUMC.
Our study aims to compare postoperative outcomes, postoperative pain and postoperative quality of lives in patients who receive the standard sternal precautions to those in patients who received self-managed sternal precautions following sternotomy for cardiac surgeries. The purpose of the study is to see if self-managed sternal precautions following sternotomy for cardiac surgeries lead to better quality of lives while maintaining same postoperative pain and rate of postoperative adverse events than standard sternal precautions. Postoperative pain and postoperative quality of lives will be assessed by phone call surveys. Postoperative outcomes will be measured by following the patients for up to a year using electronic medical record.
Despite improvements in available techniques and prostheses, the long-term evolution of patients after transcatheter paravalvular leak closure remains poorly understood. The objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term outcome of patients after transcatheter paravalvular leak closure and to identify factors predictive of survival. The investigators designed a retrospective multicentre observational registry entitled FFPP (e.g. "Fermeture des Fuites Para-Prothétiques" in French). Seventeen centres from France, Poland, Turkey and Belgium enrolled retrospectively at least one PVLc procedure on aortic, mitral, tricuspid or pulmonary valves without limit in its delay of performance.Follow-up of at least one year was expected
MANTRA is a prospective, multiple-arm, multi-center, global, post-market clinical follow-up study. The main objective is to monitor ongoing safety and performance of the CORCYM devices and accessories used for aortic, mitral and tricuspid valvular diseases in a real-world setting. Corcym S.r.l., is a medical device manufacturer with a broad product portfolio for cardiac surgeons, offering solutions for the treatment of aortic, mitral and tricuspid valve disease. The MANTRA Master Plan (Master Protocol) is intended as an overarching Umbrella Protocol that allows multiple sub-studies to be added, as needed. The Umbrella Master Protocol concept offers an excellent solution to provide post-marketing clinical follow-up information on the entire cardiac surgery heart valve portfolio of the sponsor in a common database, including corelab assessment of hemodynamic and structural performance, annular motion and Dynamics for one of the products. Currently, three sub-studies are planned: - MANTRA - Aortic Sub-Study - MANTRA - Mitral/Tricuspid Sub-Study (Excluding Memo 4D) - MANTRA - Memo 4D Sub-Study
Recovery after surgery depends on psychological factors such as preoperative information, expectations and surgery-associated anxiety. Prior studies have shown that even short preoperative psychological interventions can improve postoperative outcomes in heart surgery patients. However, what content works best for which patient group and how long an intervention has to be is still largely unknown. The aims of this study are thus to examine if the developed preoperative psychological intervention (i) reduces preoperative anxiety, (ii) increases positive expectations, and (iii) improves the long-term outcome postoperative recovery. Therefore, a brief intervention has been developed. Heart valve patients who undergo a heart surgery will be randomized into two groups (Control vs. intervention group) after baseline assessment. Following this the intervention group will participate in the psychological intervention (30-40 minutes). To increase patients' positive expectations the intervention will focus on treatment outcome expectations and personal control expectations. Furthermore, patients in the intervention group will have two booster-telephone calls (four and eight weeks after the surgery) to check if their developed plans work out. The control group will receive the standard medical procedure. Both groups will fill out questionnaires again at the evening before the surgery, around one week after the surgery and three months after surgery.
The purpose of this study is to assess exercise patterns during home-based or center-based cardiac rehabilitation participation.
To determine the effect of modified ultrafiltration, which is usually employed for reducing free water at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), on coagulation profile in patients undergoing cardiac surgery