View clinical trials related to Chronic Coronary Artery Disease.
Filter by:The chronic coronary artery disease could be detected by a drop in the expression of A2A receptors to adenosine, while high values of the KD / EC50 ratio are a sign of coronary ischemia. Knowing the number of A2A receptors in circulating lymphocytes could allow detection of coronary artery disease and evaluating the functionality of A2A receptors in circulating lymphocytes could allow quantification of myocardial ischemia. Thus, a simple and unique blood sample would quickly detect patients with life-threatening coronary ischemia. This would avoid prolonged hospitalizations and costly non-invasive tests (stress echocardiography, myocardial scintigraphy) in patients without coronary artery disease.
In this study, we evaluate the acute coronary syndrome patients to see if there is correlation between platelet activity, genetic polymorphism (CYP2C19 and ABCB1), serum adipokines level, and Clopidogrel responsiveness.