View clinical trials related to Cardiovascular Diseases.
Filter by:Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is one of the prominent diseases that affect many people. One cost-effective solution is to identify people at higher risk of CVD by CVD risk prediction model. China-PAR, TRS-2P, and SMART2 are common risk prediction models for prevention. However, these risk scores were mostly based on the routinely self-check health information and multivariable regression without time-varying consideration. Investigators developed a Machine Learning (ML) based risk prediction model, Personalized CARdiovascular DIsease risk Assessment for Chinese (P-CARDIAC) among a predominantly Chinese population in Hong Kong to estimates the 10 years of secondary recurrent CVD risk for the high-risk individuals. The study objective is to evaluate the accuracy of the P-CARDIAC performance in practice among a large-scale Hong Kong population in medicine specialist outpatient clinic (SOPC) and cardiac clinic. The results will reassure cardiologists that the P-CARDIAC risk score is sensitive to the heart disease symptoms. Investigators anticipate that the results may help to facilitate P-CARDIAC in clinical setting and provide more practical information with the development of P-CARDIAC.
This protocol will collect real world EHR data to support the product development life cycle activities associated with developing the Major Adverse Cardiac Events (MACE) Clinical Decision Support (CDS) software. The data will also be utilized in subsequent clinical validation to support an FDA application and/or applications to other regulatory agencies as needed.
Recent investigations have shown that of the patients who were affected by SARCov2 have remained with persistent symptoms in a high proportion. In these considerations, the literature has suggested nomenclatures such as "post-COVID-19" and "chronic COVID-19", "long -COVID" and Post-Covid Syndrome for patients recovered from SARCov2 reporting persistent symptoms and signs for weeks to months after resolution of the acute infection. Furthermore, there may be cardiovascular complications in affected patients, the consequences of which can lead to muscle contractility disorders, vascular insufficiency, cardiac arrest, reinforcing the need for controlled, randomized studies, as well as follow-up and monitoring of these. Furthermore, cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are part of the health problems that lead to the most deaths in the world, they also lead to a high proportion of hospital admissions, due to the worsening of the pathology and a higher incidence in the elderly population. The worsening of CVD conditions leads to inadequate food consumption at the hospital level, causing changes in several nutrients, including vitamin B12. The reduction in B12 levels leads to changes in several systems, including the cardiovascular system, and due to the increase in homocysteine and the triggering of the inflammatory cascade. Studies indicate that B12 supplementation through Chlorella (microalgae - functional food) reduced cardiovascular risk and modulated the inflammatory cascade. In combination, neurostimulation has presented aspects that promote pain neuromodulation, due to the improvement of respiratory patterns and inflammatory modulation. More specifically, there is a protocol with promoting findings, this being HD-tDCS. In this sense, this research aims to evaluate the effects of HD-tDCS and the consumption of Chlorella Pyrenoidosa to improve B12 levels in patients with cardiovascular risk post-COVID-19.
Participants are being recruited at the inpatient department of the National Medical Research Center of Cardiology on a 'all-comers' basis. The enrolled participants will be divided into the main group (diagnosed with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD)) and control (not diagnosed with ASCVD). The participants will have whole blood and serum collected at enrollment for further biobanking. A genome-wide association study will be carried out to determine the genetic determinants associated with atherosclerosis, coronary heart disease, acute coronary syndrome, etc., including a search for pathogenic variants.
Women with breast cancer treated using anthracyclines and/or trastuzumab are at an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) following treatment completion. Exercise is known to reduce CVD risk in healthy and several clinical populations, but, whether existing cardiac rehabilitation programs can be leveraged to reduce CVD risk in breast cancer survivors is unknown. This study aims to: i) understand the feasibility of virtual versus in-person cardiac rehabilitation in breast cancer survivors; and ii) compare the effect of virtual versus in-person cardiac rehabilitation on cardiovascular function and injury biomarkers, physical fitness, and psychosocial health. 50 breast cancer survivors with increased CVD risk will be recruited and randomized to either the in-person or virtual arm of the cardiac rehabilitation program at Women's College Hospital (WCH). Data will be collected at baseline, following program completion, and 6-months after program completion. The primary outcomes are measures of study feasibility. Other clinically relevant outcomes to be collected include: i) imaging and blood-based biomarkers of cardiovascular function; ii) physical fitness; iii) objective and self-reported physical activity levels; and iv) self-reported measures of psychosocial wellbeing. These findings will be used to inform the design of a larger-scale cardio-oncology trial and will facilitate development of more comprehensive CVD risk management strategies for breast cancer survivors at WCH.
The study aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Supernova stent retriever device, developed by Gravity Medical Technology, for treating acute ischemic stroke. The device is used to remove blood clots and restore blood flow to the brain .
The overall research objective of this proposal is to determine the acute and chronic impact of daily supplementation of a Good Health beverage on indices of physiological and neurocognitive health.
The study evaluates how various therapeutic approaches perform in addressing depression, anxiety symptoms, and stress levels among patients in the second stage of cardiac rehabilitation. This study aims to evaluate the influence of the used therapeutic approaches on psychological outcomes and to compare the effectiveness of these therapies.
Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are important public health concerns around the world and closely associated with the development and progression of mental illness, which in turn increases the risk of developing cardiovascular diseases. This study aimed (1) to explore the known or unknown protective and risk factors underlying this comorbidity using questionnaires; (2) to study the biomarkers (body fluid, imaging) of the participants, and to find the influence on the relationship between CVD and mental health; (3) to identify high-risk populations for mental disorders in CVD patients and to establish prediction models. (4) to establish a specialized medical database.
To test the preliminary effectiveness of a home-based exercise training (ET) intervention to improve exercise capacity (VO2 peak & 6-minute walk distance [6MWD]) among prostate cancer (PC) patients compared to controls receiving healthy living education (HLE) at 12 weeks.