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Cardiovascular Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cardiovascular Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT02830945 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Innovative Multigenerational Household Intervention to Reduce Stroke and CVD

FITSMI
Start date: July 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

American Indians (AI's) are experiencing an epidemic of stroke morbidity and mortality, with higher prevalence and incidence, younger age at onset, and poorer survival than other racial and ethnic groups. With a stroke incidence more than twice that of the general U.S. population, stroke in AI's is a public health problem of staggering scope. AI's also have disproportionate burdens of many risk factors for stroke, including hypertension, smoking, obesity, and diabetes. However, no rigorous, population-based studies of stroke prevention have included AI's. The investigators at WSU, and community partners, have designed the "Family Intervention in the Spirit of Motivational Interviewing" (FITSMI), a program delivered at the household level to encourage lifestyle changes that transform the home environment and reduce stroke risk for all residents. FITSMI uses a "talking circle" format in which facilitators guide participants to identify goals for change and create a tailored plan for sustainable implementation that may target smoking, exercise, diet, or medication adherence. FITSMI requires just 2 sessions (baseline and 1 month post-baseline), with text messaging used to boost long-term adherence. In a group-randomized trial design, the investigators will recruit 360 households where Strong Heart Family Study members aged 45 and older reside. The investigators will assign half to FITSMI and half to a control condition that receives educational brochures.

NCT ID: NCT02821780 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Disease

CADASIL Disease Discovery

Start date: October 18, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarct (CADASIL) is a lethal disease caused by a gene mutation that affects arteries in the brain. Symptoms include migraines, strokes, memory loss, and dementia. There are no treatments. Researchers want to study people who have CADASIL to learn more about it. Objectives: To learn more about CADASIL by studying people who have it. Eligibility: People ages 18-100 who were diagnosed with CADASIL in the past 5 years and can make their own decisions Design: Participants will be screened in another NIH protocol. Participants will have 3 visits over 2 years. These may include: - Physical exam - Thinking and concentration tests - Blood tests - Skin biopsy: A small skin punch is removed from the arm or leg - Eye exam and eye imaging tests - Fluorescein angiogram: A catheter is placed in an arm vein. Dye is given through the catheter and travels to the eyes. - EndoPAT: A small clamp on the fingertip measures blood volume. - Cardio-ankle vascular index (CAVI): Artery stiffness is tested with blood pressure cuffs on the arms and legs. Soft electrodes on the skin measure heart signals. - Brain MRI or MRA: They lie on a table that slides in and out of a tube that takes pictures. They may get a contrast agent in their vein. It brightens the brain so researchers can see where blood flows. - CT scan of the heart: They lie on a table that slides in and out of a machine that takes pictures. - They get contrast dye injected through a catheter. They may get a medicine that makes their blood vessels bigger or slows their heart rate.

NCT ID: NCT02821104 Completed - Type 2 Diabetes Clinical Trials

Complement and Cardiovascular Risk in Adolescents

CCRIA
Start date: June 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study evaluates how genetic variations in complement, a part of the immune system, affect cardiovascular risk in adolescents.

NCT ID: NCT02820870 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Disease

Quality Improvement and Personalization for Statins

QUIPS
Start date: March 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators developed novel quality improvement intervention consisting of a personalized decision support tool, an educational program, a performance measure, and an audit and feedback system to encourage the adoption of the VA/DoD guidelines for the use of statin medicines. The investigators then performed a cluster randomized trial of the intervention in a single clinic.

NCT ID: NCT02808910 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

A Small Nudge for Better Health Through Reduced Salt Intake, Increased Vegetable Intake, and Smaller Portion Size

Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will investigate whether small changes (nudges) made in a cafeteria, where participants eat for 4 weeks, can improve their food behavior and health during the 4 weeks, and 6 weeks and 6 months after their stay. Half the participants will be exposed to one of four types of nudges (focused on reducing salt intake, increasing vegetable intake, reducing portion size, and a combination of these nudges), and half of the participants will eat in the cafeteria as it is currently, without modifications.

NCT ID: NCT02806700 Completed - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Twitter and Diabetes

Start date: June 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Twitter use is surprisingly well represented across broad demographic population segments and health-related messages. The promise of using Twitter is that its use is growing rapidly, it allows the investigators to view communications that were impossible to intercept before, and it potentially provides information faster and less expensively than collection from other media channels. Prior work also supports that social media interventions can improve health behavior change (e.g. weight loss, physical activity) and outcomes.The overarching goals of this proposal are to understand the uses and limitations of this communication channel to improve patients' ability to manage their CV health condition.

NCT ID: NCT02804698 Completed - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Tools And Practices To Decrease CVD And Complications In The Diabetic Population Of Mexico

Start date: August 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project will look to improve standards of care for diabetic patients by evaluating a program that supports participants in making healthy lifestyle changes. The program consists of 13 educational sessions that contain information about the prevention and care of diabetes and cardiovascular disease, physical activity, nutrition, community health and emotional well being.

NCT ID: NCT02796976 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

Exercise, Arterial Cross-Talk Modulation and Inflammation in an Ageing Population

ExAMIN AGE
Start date: March 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aims of the study are twofold. In the cross-sectional approach (Part I), the study will be conducted in an older population to assess the association of physical fitness on different parts of the human vascular bed. In the interventional approach (Part II), it aims to investigate whether and to what extent advanced vascular ageing (AVA) in older subjects with increased cardiovascular risk can be reversed by regular walking- based high intensity interval training.

NCT ID: NCT02792868 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Disease

Biological Phosphocalcic Metabolism and Coronary Artery Calcifications

BIOCAC
Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Study a sample of patients in primary prevention, moderate cardiovascular risk (n = 83 patients), with normal, non-diabetic renal function. The investigators quantify the phophocalcic intake and excretion, realizing a food examination and a urine collection of 24 particular. The investigators will measure plasma levels of FGF23 serum calcium, phosphatemia, the investigators will calculate the tubular reabsorption of phosphate. The investigators will conduct a quantitative assessment of coronary calcification by a non-injected CT scan, measuring semi automated way Agatston calcium score. There will be an analysis of collinearity. An adjustment will be made for confounding variables in a generalized linear regression model.

NCT ID: NCT02789800 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Patient-Centred Innovations for Persons With Multimorbidity - Quebec

PACEinMM-QC
Start date: April 22, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of Patient-Centred Innovations for Persons With Multimorbidity (PACE in MM) study is to reorient the health care system from a single disease focus to a multimorbidity focus; centre on not only disease but also the patient in context; and realign the health care system from separate silos to coordinated collaborations in care. PACE in MM will propose multifaceted innovations in Chronic Disease Prevention and Management (CDPM) that will be grounded in current realities (i.e. Chronic Care Models including Self-Management Programs), that are linked to Primary Care (PC) reform efforts. The study will build on this firm foundation, will design and test promising innovations and will achieve transformation by creating structures to sustain relationships among researchers, decision-makers, practitioners, and patients. The Team will conduct inter-jurisdictional comparisons and is mainly a Quebec (QC) - Ontario (ON) collaboration with participation from 3 other provinces: British Columbia (BC); Manitoba (MB); and Nova Scotia (NS). The Team's objectives are: 1) to identify factors responsible for success or failure of current CDPM programs linked to the PC reform, by conducting a realist synthesis of their quantitative and qualitative evaluations; 2) to transform consenting CDPM programs identified in Objective 1, by aligning them to promising interventions on patient-centred care for multimorbidity patients, and to test these new innovations' in at least two jurisdictions and compare among jurisdictions; and 3) to foster the scaling-up of innovations informed by Objective 1 and tested/proven in Objective 2, and to conduct research on different approaches to scaling-up. This registration for Clinical Trials only pertains to Objective 2 of the study.