View clinical trials related to Constriction, Pathologic.
Filter by:This study employs a multicenter, randomized controlled trial method, where patients meeting the inclusion criteria for subglottic stenosis are randomly divided into two groups. These groups are respectively undergoing translaryngeal endoscopic mucosal injection and ultrasound-guided injection of triamcinolone treatment. The comparison will focus on various indicators such as therapeutic effect, incidence of adverse reactions, treatment costs, and hospital resource utilization between the two groups. The safety and effectiveness will be compared to determine the relative merits of the two treatment methods.
The study is a prospective multicentre registry study. Patients admitted to 10 stroke centres nationwide from September 2022 to September 2025 with acute ischaemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion considering underlying ICAS and treated with emergency endovascular thrombolysis were included for analysis. Patients who met the general inclusion criteria underwent thrombectomy and the necessary remedial treatment.
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) encounters challenges with calcified coronary lesions, leading to potential issues such as failed balloon dilatation, incomplete stent expansion, and increased risks of adverse events post-PCI, including stent restenosis and thrombosis. Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL), a novel approach for severely calcified coronary lesion preparation, has shown promising preliminary outcomes. Combining IVL with conventional approaches, such as Rotational atherectomy (RA), non-compliant balloons, or cutting balloons, may associated with additional benefit than conventional approaches only in terms of better stent expansion and lower long-term adverse events. This pilot randomized trial aims to investigate whether combining IVL to conventional therapy surpasses the efficacy of conventional approaches alone. The primary effectiveness endpoint is final stent expansion assessed by post-procedure optical coherence tomography (OCT), and the primary safety endpoint is target lesion failure (TVF). The trial seeks to provide valuable insights into the optimal approach for managing severely calcified coronary lesions during PCI.
This study aims to investigate the prevalence and characteristics of multiple and mixed valvular heart disease (MMVD), which includes combinations of stenotic or regurgitant lesions on cardiac valves. The research will be conducted as a multicenter observational study, involving several centers worldwide, and will have a one-year follow-up period (with a possible extension to 5 years). The primary aim is to determine the proportion of MMVD among patients evaluated for valvular heart disease. Secondary aims include the evaluation of the epidemiologic distribution of clinical, biological, and cardiovascular imaging characteristics at baseline, management strategies, and their impact on prognosis. The study will also evaluate clinical outcomes such as mortality, hospitalization for heart failure, and changes in echocardiographic parameters. This research aims to provide valuable insights into the diagnosis, management, and prognosis of MMVD, addressing an important knowledge gap in this area.
To evaluate the effectiveness of administering mitomycin C through intralesional injection after performing visual internal urethrotomy (VIU) for the treatment of recurring urethral stricture.
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is now the first therapeutic option offered to high and intermediate risk patients with symptomatic aortic stenosis but even to low-risk, when the aortic valve is tricuspid and the transfemoral approach is suitable. Vascular and bleeding complications are the most frequent procedure-related unwanted events associated with increased short-term morbidity and mortality. Selection of the appropriate vascular access site and pre-closing devices as well as stent implantation mitigate these complications. ACT-guided heparin reaching a target of 300 seconds or more is recommended prior to the placement of the guiding sheath in the common femoral artery. Protamine sulfate is the heparin antidote, which antagonizes 100% of its anti-IIa activity and 60% of its anti-Xa activity. Reversal of heparin using protamine sulfate is recommended for transapical and complicated transfemoral aortic valve placement.However, there is a great heterogeneity of protamine use in daily practice and supportive evidence for the prevention of bleeding complications as well as its safety is lacking. In addition, the radial approach for the second vascular access is more commonly used as well as the use of echo-guided femoral puncture further questioning reversal of heparin when the procedure has been successfully completed without overt bleeding complications. Our study aims to demonstrate the superiority of a strategy of systematic ACT-guided heparin administration followed by systematic antagonization with protamine sulfate over usual of care to reduce in-hospital mortality, vascular/bleeding complications, stroke and transcient ischemic attack, myocardial infarction or red blood cell transfusion, from randomization to hospital discharge
The goal of the NEO2 BAV registry is to investigate the safety, effectiveness, and clinical performance of TAVI using the ACURATE neo2 valve in patients with severe BAV stenosis. The clinical, procedural, and imaging characteristics will be collected from patients with severe BAV stenosis, regardless of the phenotype, and treated with TAVI using the ACURATE neo2 bioprosthesis worldwide.
Stroke is the second leading cause of death and the third leading cause of disability worldwide. The cause is usually either a blockage or a severe narrowing of a cerebral artery. An important part of stroke prevention is the diagnosis and clarification of stenosis in the arteries supplying the brain, both inside and outside the skull, in order to diagnose a high-grade stenosis at an early stage and offer the patient revascularization. In particular, asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis confronts the diagnosing physician with the question of whether revascularisation is necessary. Risk factors for stroke in asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis include contralateral TIA or cerebral infarction, male gender, rapid progression of the degree of stenosis, plaque morphology, clinically silent cerebral infarctions, Doppler sonographic evidence of microemboli or reduced vasomotor reserve. An established biomarker does not exist at this time. A candidate for such a biomarker in the blood is the protein "neurofilament light chain" (NFL), which is already established in the diagnosis of dementia. As a component of the cytoskeleton of neurons, it is released into the patient's blood when the cells are damaged and can be measured there. Another candidate is glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP), a part of the cytoskeleton of glial cells that is also released into the blood when glial cells are damaged. A systematic investigation of the value of neurofilament light chain and the glial fibrillary acidic protein in the blood of patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis is still lacking. VANGAS determines the value of NFL and GFAP from the blood of patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis to determine associations with the degree of stenosis, the natural course of the stenosis (increase or decrease) and possible symptoms of the stenosis as well as the functional outcome after symptomatic stenosis.
This study is a prospective, multi-center, randomized controlled study, which evaluates the effectiveness and safety of cold laser plaque ablation for lower limb arterial stenosis and occlusive lesions from intermittent claudication to chronic threatening limb ischemia.
Patients with severe aortic stenosis combined with severe heart failure often miss the opportunity for surgery, and the prognosis is poor with drug therapy alone.In recent years, the emergence of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has brought new hope for these patients, and since its birth in 2002, TAVR has been widely used internationally, and its safety and efficacy have been confirmed by several large, prospective, randomized controlled studies. Levosimendan is a new type of positive inotropic drug. It not only enhances myocardial contractile force through calcium sensitization, but also activates K+ sensitive channel KATP on the membrane of vascular smooth muscle, relaxes the arteries and veins of the whole body, and reduces the front and back load of the heart, pulmonary vascular resistance and systemic vascular resistance. A series of studies suggested that for patients undergoing thoracotomy in various cardiac surgeries, regardless of whether the patients were accompanied by ventricular systolic dysfunction before surgery, the use of levosimendan resulted in significantly higher postoperative cardiac function and decreased mortality than the control group, and patients with preoperative LVEF < 40% benefited more. At present, there are no studies to clarify the regulatory effect of levosimendan on cardiac function after TAVR in patients with severe aortic stenosis complicated with cardiac insufficiency. This is a randomized controlled study. On the basis of basic drug therapy, the treatment group was given levosimendan to analyze the regulatory effect of levosimendan on cardiac function after TAVR.