View clinical trials related to Cardiomyopathies.
Filter by:The EXCITE-HCM study is a randomized, controlled, blinded clinical trial designed to evaluate the effect of moderate intensity exercise training versus usual physicial activity on the improvement of HCM-related symptoms and cardiac function. About 70 participants will be recruited and randomized on a 1:1 ratio to either moderate intensity training or usual physicial activity interventions. Patients will be followed during a period of 24 weeks and assesesments as physical examination, questionnaires, 12 lead ecg's, biomarker levels, echocardiogram, Cardiac Magnetic resonance, PET and CPET will be performed to evaluate their response to the intervention.
There is some limited evidence that reduced size of electrical complexes/traces of the heart on the electrocardiogram (ECG) may be associated with scarring in the heart muscle, which may predispose to serious life-threatening electrical abnormalities and sudden cardiac death (SCD). There is no current guidance on how young individuals and athletes with reduced ECG traces should be managed. Therefore, correct interpretation of this ECG finding is crucial for identifying athletes with disease and at risk of SCD. Some athletes experience SCD despite normal standard cardiac tests. The investigators, therefore, propose to study young healthy individuals and young athletes using cardiovascular MRI, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, 24 hour ECG monitoring and genetic analysis to determine the significance of reduced ECG traces and possibly revise current international sports recommendations.
Transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis causes debilitating heart failure in older adults. The proposed research will develop a personalized exercise training program to improve functional capacity in patients on optimal treatment for transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis. This is a vital next step to improve functional capacity and quality of life of people suffering from transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis.
Efficacy and safety of early administration of the SGLT-2 inhibitor dapagliflozin will be evaluated in patients with HF, regardless of LVEF, due to amyloid cardiomyopathy.
The goal of this observational study is to test the accuracy of computer (machine learning-based) algorithms to diagnosis heart diseases and predict if and when heart complications will occur. The AID-MRI research team has developed algorithms aimed at modelling 3D heart structure and movement (deformation), showing these may be of value to achieve these tasks. The International AID-MRI study aims to test the performance of these algorithms across 11 international sites, using data obtained from a broad variety of patients using different MRI scanners. In addition to an established cohort of 10,000 patients, AID-MRI will recruit an additional 1100 patients from its international sites, these serving as an external validation cohort.
Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is an acute and reversible form of myocardial injury often preceded by a physical or emotional trigger. Although TTS was generally considered a benign disease for its reversible nature, it is now clear that hemodynamic and electrical instability during the acute phase exposes patients to frequent serious adverse in-hospital complications. However, the pathophysiology of TTS is far from being completely understood. Consistent evidence demonstrated that the environmental events experienced by most of these patients and perceived as stressful (both physical or emotional) induce a brain activation and a stress-related response, with increasing bioavailability of local and circulating stress mediators, such as catecholamine and cortisol, which showed to play a major role in the etiology of to the "neurogenic stunning myocardium" responsible for this clinical condition. Primary and secondary TTS showed an important clinical heterogeneity identifying two different subtypes of patients with different outcomes and risk profiles. the invastigators hypothesize that a different activation of the brain structures involved in acute stress response, as well as a different exposure to chronic stress, may subtend the different clinical and risk profiles observed in primary vs. secondary TTS patients. Moreover, the invastigators hypothesize that distinct signatures of circulating biomarkers may be associated with these two categories of TTS patients. Therefore, identifying these specific signatures may help in the diagnosis of these patients and pave the way for the identification of specific pathophysiologic pathways and the development of future therapies.
This study aims at evaluating the role of Atorvastatin in prevention of Anthracycline induced cardiotoxicity
Longitudinal analysis of myocardial function using "Speckle Tracking Echocardiography" STE analysis and prediction of delayed toxic induced cardiomyopathy in young patients who received anthracycline therapy in childhood.
The objective of this study is to evaluate acute changes of cardiac troponin (and other cardiac biomarkers) and mid-term biovariability in patients with cardiomyopathy associated with chronic skeletal muscle disease. The specific aims of the study are: Firstly, to evaluate the feasibility of the ESC 0/1 hour protocol for rule-in and rule-out of a non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS). Secondly, a) to determine reference change values (RCV) to characterize physiological biovariability, b) to differentiate acute from chronic high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) elevations.
The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the safety and efficacy of three intravenous injections of the extracellulat vesicle-enriched secretome of cardiovascular progenitor cells in severely symptomatic patients with drug-refractory left ventricular (LV) dysfunction secondary to non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Are these repeated injections safe and well tolerated? - Do they improve cardiac function and, if yes, to what extent?