View clinical trials related to Cardiovascular Diseases.
Filter by:The STABLE-VT trial aims to determine the safety profile and clinical efficacy of a modified approach to ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation that integrates myocardial scar as visualized on cardiac magnetic resonance (c-MRI) or CT into electroanatomical mapping (EAM) for VT ablation.
This 4-arm (1:1:1:1) single-blind randomized controlled trial. Arm 1 will communicate risk and encourage behavioral change that mirrors the standard pathway for health screening in Singapore. Arm 2 replaces the standard report with Heartage to communicate risk. Arm 3 adds the HOPE-CVD app, a digital platform that incorporates evidence based behavioral change techniques, to Arm 2 . Arm 4 adds a genetic risk score to Arm 3. The primary objectives of this study are to: - Evaluate the impact of each intervention compared to standard care (arm 1) on the risk for cardiovascular disease, estimated using the Framingham Risk Score - Evaluate the impact of each intervention compared to standard care (arm 1) on health-related quality of life and well-being The secondary objectives are: - Evaluate the impact of each intervention compared to standard care (arm 1) on individual risk factors (Blood pressure, Total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, BMI, Smoking status) for CVD - Evaluate the impact of each intervention compared to standard care (arm 1) on the practice of health-promoting behaviors The HOPE-CVD app is a 6-month interventional program. Hence, the effects of the interventions will be evaluated after a 6-month period. Participants will be required to come to the study site twice for baseline and follow-up health screening. All study interventions and other data collected in time points different from baseline and follow-up will be communicated virtually and delivered to participants without additional in-person interaction. Due to this all-virtual nature of the study, participants who need pharmacological therapy (i.e patients with diabetes) will be excluded as they would require a physician's care as well.
Problem. Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are the best way to determine if interventions are safe and effective. Usually only a small number of eligible patients enroll. This is because trials require people to consent to be enrolled and randomized. Black and Hispanic people are more likely to develop heart disease. They are also more likely to have risk factors for heart disease that are not controlled. Yet they are very under-represented in heart disease trials. This raises concerns about if trial results can be applied to the general population. Trial sponsors are required to enroll patients that reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of real-world people. Black and Hispanic people continue to enroll in trials at a lower rate. The goal of this study is to conduct a series of small randomized trials to test recruitment strategies to increase how many Black and Hispanic people enroll in heart disease clinical trials without diminishing trust. The investigators will test different recruitment strategies for participant enrollment in a few different areas. They will study the method of outreach, the way messages are framed, defaults, and enrollment incentives. They will run smaller recruitment strategy trials within larger parent trials (e.g. Penn Medicine Biobank cohort study). They will run a small recruitment strategy trial to test each approach and then include what they learned in the next small trial.
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among women in the United States, and women with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy have a 2-fold higher risk for cardiovascular disease later in life compared to women with uncomplicated pregnancies. This research investigates a patient-centered intervention during the postpartum period to promote engagement in cardiovascular preventive care.
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) represents one of the largest unmet needs in cardiovascular medicine. Heart muscle scarring (myocardial fibrosis) is a key HFpEF disease mechanism and represents an important therapeutic target. Myocardial fibrosis can be measured non-invasively using the cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) extracellular volume (ECV) technique. However, some patients cannot undergo MRI scanning, and it is expensive. Circulating biomarkers in the blood that are sensitive to changes in myocardial fibrosis would represent an attractive cheaper and accessible alternative. This study aims to assess baseline levels of, and longitudinal change in, circulating biomarkers relating to fibrosis and cardiovascular disease in gifted samples from PIROUETTE trial participants, and evaluate the relationship between the biomarkers, anti-fibrotic treatment response and other study measurements.
The goal of this clinical trial is to enrich the hamburger meatball with psyllium without impairing its sensory properties and to investigate the effects on acute postprandial lipemia and glycemia, prospective food intake, and some appetite indicators in healthy adults. The main hypotheses of the study are: 1. There is no difference in sensory analysis results between hamburger meatballs enriched with psyllium and those that are not enriched. 2. The rise in postprandial lipids after consuming psyllium-enriched hamburger meatballs is lower than that of classic hamburgers. 3. The rise in postprandial glycemia after consuming psyllium-enriched hamburger meatballs is lower than that of classic hamburgers. 4. The feeling of satiety after consuming psyllium-enriched hamburger meatballs lasts longer, and the feeling of hunger lasts for a shorter period compared to classic hamburgers. 5. Daily food intake after consuming psyllium-enriched hamburger meatballs is less than that of classic hamburgers. Participants will, - Eat hamburgers, after fasting for 12 hours, with psyllium-enriched and classic meatballs on intervention days. - Keep a record of their food intake for the previous and following 24 hours of each intervention. - Be given fasting and postprandial blood samples. - Evaluate their hunger and satiety levels on a 100 mm horizontal visual analog scale (VAS) at the beginning and every hour for the following 6 hours of the study.
It's a phase III, prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the pulmonary artery denervation (PADN) for heart failure (HF) patients diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension associate with left heart disease (PH-LHD) by right heart catheterization.
This pilot study aims to examine the feasibility and acceptability of adding a cardiovascular health module to the existing Nurse Family Partnership (NFP) home visitation program delivered by trained nurses in the Northern Appalachian region of Central Pennsylvania.
This pilot study aims to examine the feasibility and acceptability of adding a cardiovascular health module to the existing Nurse Family Partnership (NFP) home visitation program delivered by trained nurses in the Northern Appalachian region of Central Pennsylvania.
This pragmatic clinical trial embedded in an accountable care organization will determine the comparative effectiveness of two approaches for assigning care coordinators to older adults at risk for cardiovascular outcomes. The hypothesis is that assigning care coordinators to older adults based on perceived need will be more effective at preventing emergency department visits and hospitalizations compared to usual care.