View clinical trials related to Chronic Heart Failure.
Filter by:The study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of both aliskiren monotherapy and aliskiren/enalapril combination therapy as compared to enalapril monotherapy, on morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic heart failure (NYHA Class II - IV.
To test the compliance, tolerance, safety and to get preliminary insights into the efficacy of a new oral nutritional supplement (containing n-3 fatty acids, amino acids and antioxidants) designed to prevent or delay cachexia and anorexia in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Conventional measures used for the treatment of chronic heart failure act predominantly by reducing the work performed by the heart. In a recent study, the investigators showed that one drug (perhexiline) substantially improved symptoms and cardiac function in heart failure. The investigators wish to confirm these findings and test whether or not this drug acts by altering the heart's energy source thus augmenting the energetic status and work efficiency of the heart.
This study is designed to assess, relative to placebo, the effects on the evolution of exercise capacity and symptomatic status of the addition of iron treatment with FCM (ferric carboxymaltose) to the basic regimen of ambulatory patients with stable symptomatic chronic CHF (congestive heart failure) and iron deficiency.
Objective: To assess the effectiveness of implementation process of an electronic Heart Failure guideline in primary care in the city of Barcelona.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the HeartWare® LVAD System in patients listed for cardiac transplantation with refractory, advanced heart failure at risk of death. The primary endpoint is survival at 180 days which is defined as alive on the originally implanted HeartWare® LVAD or transplanted or explanted for recovery. Patient must survive 60 days post-explant for recovery to be considered successful. Secondary endpoints include: - Overall survival - Incidence of all serious adverse events, neurocognitive status and unanticipated adverse device effects. - Incidence of all device failures and device malfunctions - Quality of Life improvement, as measured by Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) and EuroQoL EQ-5D - Functional status improvement, as measured by the New York Heart Association (NYHA) and 6-minute walk The HeartWare® LVAD System was approved by the US FDA on November 20, 2012 as a bridge to cardiac transplantation (reference PMA P100047). Patients enrolled into this study will be followed to an outcome at six months, and then patients will receive continued follow-up in a separate study.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of SK&F-105517-D in japanese patients with chronic heart failure.
Several lines of evidence have suggested that Advanced Glycation End-products (AGEs) play a role in the development and progression of heart failure. The AGE-crosslink breaker Alagebrium improved cardiac function and symptoms in experimental preclinical and small human heart failure studies. These results have not yet been confirmed in a randomized controlled clinical trial. Objective: to evaluate the safety and efficacy of alagebrium in subjects diagnosed with heart failure. This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to assess the effects of 400 mg (2 x 100 mg bid) of alagebrium versus placebo over 9 months. 100 subjects will be studied (50 per treatment group) in approximately 6 centers. Procedures: exercise testing (VO2 max; the primary variable), ECGs and blood sampling.
We want to evaluate the utility of statins on heart function according to potency. Patients with chronic ischemic heart failure are administered pitavastatin 4mg or pravastatin 10mg for 52 weeks. Then we evaluate the effect of pitavastatin and pravastatin primarily on rate of hospitalization for cardiovascular cause and lipid profile secondarily biomarker, echocardiography parameter, 6-minute walk, change of NYHA class distribution, cardiovascular mortality.
This study will compare olmesartan medoxomil to candesartan cilexetil in reducing BNP, a prognostic biomarker of heart failure, at week 24