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Coronary Artery Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Coronary Artery Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT03618108 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Heart Disease

Anti-chlamydophila Antibiotic Combination Therapy in the Treatment of Patients With Coronary Heart Disease

ACAC-CHD
Start date: April 4, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to see whether the antibiotic combination of 100mg doxycycline, 500mg azithromycin and 300mg rifabutin is a safe and effective treatment for coronary artery disease which has not responded to 'standard treatment'. Coronary artery disease is the process of plaque build up within the walls of the arteries responsible for supplying the heart with oxygen and nutrients. plaque is usually made up of fatty deposits, minerals and various amounts of tissue and white cells which eventually narrows the artery, reducing blood flow to the heart. The resulting damage and build up of fat leads to inflammation of the arterial wall and eventually the arteries narrow. The researchers involved in this study consider that a pathogen called Chlamydophila pneumoniae, which can live inside cells may cause this inflammation of the arterial wall. The purpose of this study is to see if treatment with this antibiotic combination in patients with CHD is safe and effective in reducing disease severity measured at coronary angiography and improving quality of life. Approximately 60 patients will be involved in this trial. the treatment period is 90 days with a further 90 day follow up period.

NCT ID: NCT03600961 Terminated - Clinical trials for Ischemic Heart Disease

BIOFLOW-SV Portugal Registry

BIOFLOW-SV
Start date: July 5, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Assessment of the clinical safety and performance of the Orsiro drug-eluting stent in a real world setting in patients with small vessels with reference vessel diameter ≤2.75 mm

NCT ID: NCT03600948 Terminated - Clinical trials for Restenoses, Coronary

BIOFLOW-SV All Comers Registry

BIOFLOW-SV
Start date: August 27, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Assessment of the clinical safety and performance of the Orsiro drug-eluting stent in a real world setting in patients with small vessels with reference vessel diameter ≤2.75 mm.

NCT ID: NCT03538886 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Nordic-Baltic Coronary Revascularization Study in Patients With Proximal Left Descending Coronary Artery (LAD) Lesion.

NOBLE-LAD
Start date: June 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Nordic-Baltic Heart Team Initiative for improved long-term coronary artery revascularization outcome compares quality of life and survival after coronary bypass grafting (CABG) vs. percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with 1-vessel disease and proximal stenosis of the anterior descending artery (LAD/in patients with isolated proximal left descending coronary artery (LAD) lesion

NCT ID: NCT03488654 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

CMR-Lupus Comprehensive Approach by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Tomography

Start date: July 2010
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), cardiac manifestations, e.g. coronary artery disease (CAD) and myocarditis are leading causes of morbidity and mortality. The prevalence of subclinical heart disease in SLE is unknown. We studied whether a comprehensive cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) protocol may be useful for early diagnosis of heart disease in SLE patients without known CAD

NCT ID: NCT03484234 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Percutaneous Treatment of LONG Native Coronary Lesions With Drug-Eluting Stent-VII: Sirolimus-eluting (Ultimaster) vs. Everolimus-Eluting Stents (Xience)

LONG-DES VII
Start date: July 27, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study compares angiographic and clinical outcomes in patients with long coronary lesions treated with sirolimus-eluting stent (Ultimaster stent) or everolimus-eluting stent (Xience Alpine stent). The study uses a randomized, multicenter, controlled design approach.

NCT ID: NCT03369184 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Elective Percutaneous Coronary Intervention With or Without Supplemental OXYgen

EPOXY-IMR
Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Supplemental oxygen is frequently used in patients admitted to hospital due to ischemic heart disease. In the setting of suspected myocardial infarction, clinical practice guidelines advocate the use of supplementary oxygen even in patients with normal levels of peripheral oxygen saturation. The theoretical basis for this practice is that an increase in blood oxygen content may limit ischemia and final myocardial damage and subsequent infarct size. However, although some experimental laboratory data and small studies in humans have supported the use of supplemental oxygen in patients with coronary artery disease, contradicting evidence suggests possible harmful effects, mainly through mechanisms involving coronary vasoconstriction and reduction of myocardial perfusion (hyperoxemic coronary vasoconstriction). In the EPOXY-IMR trial, the investigators aim to further explore possible detrimental effects from routine use of supplemental oxygen on the coronary circulation with special focus on the small vessels referred to as the coronary microcirculation.

NCT ID: NCT03326167 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Heart Disease

Determination of Coronary Flow Reserve by Dynamic Myocardial Perfusion Scintigraphy

ERCAD
Start date: November 15, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Because of its availability, non-invasiveness, and high diagnostic performance, myocardial perfusion tomoscintigraphy has become a standard tool for the detection, characterization and monitoring of coronary artery disease. Standard analysis, based on the reversibility of regional myocardial hypoperfusion between stress (physiological or pharmacological) and rest, has good sensitivity and negative predictive value in the search for myocardial ischemia. However, two major obstacles persist. First, because of the relative nature of the normalization of cardiac activity, this approach may underestimate the extent of the damage, especially when the territory with the most activity is itself pathological. Thus myocardial perfusion scintigraphy can only detect 40 to 50% of tri-truncal patients. To overcome these disadvantages, several indexes have been proposed to improve the diagnostic performance of perfusion scintigraphy in multi-truncal patients based in particular on kinetic analysis. Secondly, the review does not provide any guarantee as to the quality and reproducibility of use of the coronal reserve during stress, in particular during submaximal stress tests and pharmacological stress, the latter being easily antagonized by xanthine derivatives contained in tea and coffee in particular (abstinence of at least 12 to 24 hours being recommended). In recent years and thanks to the advent of CZT semiconductor cameras dedicated to cardiology - to perform a dynamic tomographic acquisition - a study of the coronal reserve is feasible by perfusion tomoscintigraphy in current practice. This study of the coronary reserve mainly consists of a computer post-processing of the myocardial perfusion scintigraphy data and does not therefore require any additional irradiation (the only difference with respect to the old protocols is the start of the images at the time of publication. injection of the radiotracer). However, the diagnostic benefit gained from the coronary reserve study compared to conventional stress / rest perfusion scintigraphy has not been clearly studied, particularly in the multi-truncal patients.

NCT ID: NCT03305926 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Connected Rehabilitation: an Alternative to Conventional Cardiovascular Rehabilitation?

eRCV
Start date: May 14, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cardiovascular rehabilitation (CVR) has major beneficial effects by improving physical capacity, accelerating return to activities and reinsertion and reducing mortality. It associates reconditioning to effort and therapeutic education for the optimal control of " risk factors ". It corresponds to a global approach to patients, thus counterbalancing the tendency to hyperspecialise in medicine. However, because of the lack of specialised centres, only a small proportion of patients (≈30%) are able to benefit. Numerical tools used in e-health, the deployment of the Internet and certain " connected " devices may provide alternatives outside hospital, by enabling the follow-up of patients and their physiological parameters (heart rate, blood pressure, weigh, physical activity…), and the adaptation - using an interactive web platform - of the physical activity programme, nutrition, compliance with medication and weaning from smoking. This project proposes to evaluate the effects of a so-called " connected " CVR programme, and to show its non-inferiority compared with a conventional CVR.

NCT ID: NCT03248674 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Diagnostic Performance of Coronary CT Angiography With CT FFR in Kidney Transplantation Candidates

Start date: August 28, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) before kidney transplantation require that obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) is excluded, as cardiovascular complications are the leading cause of mortality in kidney transplant patients. However, in this patient population, the optimal method for the detection of obstructive CAD has not been identified. Noninvasive stress tests such as Dobutamine stress echocardiography or nuclear perfusion study have low diagnostic accuracy. CT fractional flow reserve measurement (CT FFR) is a novel non-invasive (FDA approved) imaging test to identify obstructive CAD. The goal of this project is to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of CT FFR in the detection of obstructive coronary artery disease in patients with chronic kidney disease before kidney transplantation.