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Cerebrovascular Stroke clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cerebrovascular Stroke.

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NCT ID: NCT01924065 Active, not recruiting - Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trials

Risk of Stroke and Silent Cerebrovascular Thromboembolism After Cardioversion of Atrial Fibrillation

AFTER-CV
Start date: August 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing cardioversion will be randomized to undergo transesophageal echocardiography or they will receive warfarin for 3 weeks with an international normalized ratio (INR) value between 2.0-3.0. Those who do not want to use warfarin will be given an approved new oral anticoagulant agent istead of warfarin for 3 weeks. If thrombus is detected in left atrium or in left atrial appendage, no cardioversion will be performed. Other patients in the both groups will undergo electrical cardioversion. After the procedures all the patients will be given oral anticoagulant for at least 4 Weeks. All patients will have neurological examination and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at baseline and at postprocedural 7th day. Clinical and subclinical cerebral thromboembolic events detected by diffusion MRI will be recorded. Any bleeding events will also be recorded.

NCT ID: NCT00671346 Active, not recruiting - Cancer Clinical Trials

NORVIT and WENBIT - Long-term Follow-up

NORVITWENBIT
Start date: December 1998
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Two large homocysteine-lowering B-vitamin intervention trials have been performed in Norway during the period 1998 to 2005, NORVIT and WENBIT. The main objective in these trials was to study the clinical effects of homocysteine-lowering therapy with folic acid and vitamin B12 in patients with established coronary artery disease. Follow-up was terminated for NORVIT on Marc 31st 2004 and for WENBIT October 5th 2005, and none of the two trials proved any protective effect of the B-vitamin intervention on cardiovascular outcomes. There is so far no data on possible long-term effects following years of such B-vitamin treatment. Thus, the main objective of the combinded NORVIT-WENBIT study will will be to evaluate the long-term effect of the B-vitamin intervention on incident life-style diseases including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, osteoporotic fractures and cancer. A secondary object will be the identification of risk phenotypes or genotypes, and if such risk associations are midified by the B-vitamin intervention