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Coronary Stenosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Coronary Stenosis.

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NCT ID: NCT03632785 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Risk Factor

Laboratory Implications of Non Obstructive Atherosclerotic Plaques Identified by Multiple Detector Coronary Angiotomography

Start date: March 27, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Approximately 50% of coronary events occur in previously asymptomatic patients. Thus, the early detection of the individuals at higher risk became an important research target within the current cardiology. The various clinical scores used present a predictive accuracy for ischemic events, evaluated by the ROC curve, which ranges from 0.73 to 0, 79. Therefore, the introduction of new non-invasive techniques for the detection of atherosclerosis aims to allow a more adequate classification of risk. The development of radiological techniques, fundamentally coronary angiotomography of multiple detectors (CAMD) and electron beam computed tomography-EBCT‖, demonstrated that the degree of coronary calcification correlates with endothelial lesion and individual prognosis in the long term. Notably, the calcium score has a weak correlation with the severity of coronary stenosis per se, possibly due to variations in arterial remodeling due to coronary calcification. On the other hand, the CAMD allows the detection of a small magnitude atheromatous disease, not diagnosed clinically, nor by tests provoking ischemia, or even by coronary catheterization. The clinical relevance of the small magnitude atheromatous disease diagnosed by the ACMD and its correlation with plaque vulnerability markers, mainly platelet aggregation, vascular reactivity, and inflammation are still not well determined. This is a case and control study and we will enrolled 90 patients with low and medium risk of cardiovascular event whose cases should present discrete plaques in the CAMD e controls should present none plaque in coronary stenosis

NCT ID: NCT03606330 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome

Systemic, Pancoronary and Local Coronary Vulnerability

VIP
Start date: October 22, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

• The aim of the VIP study is to investigate the impact of vulnerability markers (inflammatory serum biomarkers for systemic vulnerability, coronary shear stress and vulnerability mapping for pancoronary vulnerability, and imaging-based plaque features for systemic vulnerability) on the rate of major adverse cardiovascular events caused by progression of the non-culprit lesion in patients with acute ST or non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction who undergo revascularization of the culprit lesion during the acute event. Furthermore, the study will evaluate the rate of progression of non-culprit lesions towards a higher degree of vulnerability, based on coronary computed tomography angiographic assessment at 1 year after enrollment.

NCT ID: NCT03588455 Completed - Coronary Stenosis Clinical Trials

Pronostic Impact of Flow Fraction Reserve on Intermediate Stenoses

Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The intermediate coronary stenoses defined by a degree of stenosis from 40 to 70 % are frequent. The Flow Fraction Reserve (FFR), realized during coronarography, is an hemodynamic evaluation by the functional impact measuring the loss of load in upstream / approval of the stenosis inthe basal state and in situation of hyperemia led by adenosine. Further to the study FAME, the threshold of definition of the significant character of one Stenosis was fixed for a value of FFR = 0,80. However, the impact forecasts intermediate values badly known rest. We hypothetized that coronary stenosis associated with borderline values of FFR 0.81-0.85 were associated with a higher rate of clinical events than those with a FFR >0.85

NCT ID: NCT03507777 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

ILUMIEN IV: OPTIMAL PCI

Start date: May 17, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this prospective, single-blind clinical investigation is to demonstrate the superiority of an Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)-guided stent implantation strategy as compared to an angiography-guided stent implantation strategy in achieving larger post-PCI lumen dimensions and improving clinical cardiovascular outcomes in patients with high-risk clinical characteristics and/or with high-risk angiographic lesions.

NCT ID: NCT03502083 Completed - Type2 Diabetes Clinical Trials

Human Vasodilatory Effect of GLP-1

Start date: December 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Comprehensive assessment of human vasodilatory effect of GLP-1 in forearm and coronary arteries

NCT ID: NCT03461484 Completed - Ischemia Clinical Trials

e-BioMatrix 6 Month DAPT France

Start date: March 6, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Prospective, multi-center observational study to be conducted in up to 30 French interventional cardiology centers. The purpose of this observational study is to capture, in French Centers, clinical data of the BioMatrix Flex™ and BioMatrix NeoFlex™ Drug Eluting Coronary Stents System (Biolimus A9, BA9™-) in normal practice, in patients treated with 6-month DAPT, and to compare the outcomes to those of previous e-biomatrix registries with longer DAPT durations. The patients will be followed up for 2 years for data collection.

NCT ID: NCT03447197 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Stenoses

Five-year Patency of No-touch Saphenous Vein Grafts in On-pump Versus Clamp-less Off-pump Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery

Start date: September 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) have shown high long-term patency for no-touch saphenous vein grafts (NTSVGs), comparable to the internal thoracic artery in on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). RCTs on patency in NTSVGs in off-pump CABG have not been published yet. Orebro University Hospital participated in the CABG Off- or On-pump Revascularization study (CORONARY, ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00463294) and included fifty-six patients. Accordingly, this is a sub-study and the aim was to assess the midterm patency in NTSVGs in clamp-less off-pump versus on-pump CABG at five-year follow-up.

NCT ID: NCT03395041 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome

Periodontal Disease, Inflammation and Acute Coronary Syndromes

ATHERODENT
Start date: May 15, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Recent studies have shown that the systemic inflammation caused by periodontal disease (PD) can determine important changes in the coronary arteries, favoring atherosclerosis progression and development of acute coronary syndromes (ACS). The aim of ATHERODENT study is to assess the interrelation between PD, inflammation and progression of coronary atherosclerosis in patients with ACS. Material and methods: This case-control observational study will enroll 100 patients (group 1 - ACS and associated PD, and group 2 -ACS and no PD), in whom the following data will be collected: (1) demographic and clinical data, (2) cardiovascular risk factors, (3) full characterization of PD markers, (4) systemic inflammatory biomarkers, (5) imaging biomarkers derived from transthoracic echocardiography, computed tomography, coronary angiography, optical coherence tomography and intravascular ultrasound, and (6) assessment of the presence of specific oral bacteria in samples of coronary plaques collected by coronary atherectomy, which will be performed during percutaneous revascularization interventions, when indicated in selected cases, in the atherectomy sub-study. The follow-up will be performed at 1, 3, 6, 12, 15, 18 and 24 months. The primary endpoint of the study will be represented by the rate of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE rates) in PD vs non-PD patients and in correlation with: (1) the level of systemic inflammation triggered by PD and/or by ACS at baseline; (2) the vulnerability degree of atheromatous plaques in the coronary tree (culprit and non-culprit lesions); and (3) the presence and burden of oral bacteria in atheromatous plaques. Secondary endpoints will be represented by: (1) the rate of progression of vulnerability degree of non-culprit coronary plaques; (2) the rate of progression of atheromatous burden and calcium scoring of the coronary tree; and (3) the rate of occurrence of left ventricular remodeling and postinfarction heart failure.

NCT ID: NCT03391908 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome

Multiomics and Imaging-based Assessment of Vulnerable Coronary Plaques in Acute Coronary Syndromes

MultiPlaque
Start date: April 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of Multiplaque clinical study is to assess the vulnerability degree of the atheromatous plaques, before and after a myocardial infarction (MI), based on multiomics analysis, associated with invasive and non-invasive data. In this study, a multi-parametric model for risk prediction will be developed, for evaluation of the risk that is associated with the vulnerable coronary plaques in patients that have suffered an acute coronary syndrome. In the study, evaluation of the imaging characteristics of these coronary plaques will be performed with the use of CT, OCT, IVUS and invasive angiography. We will study the correlation between plaque evolution and (1) the degree of vulnerability at baseline, (2) multiomics profile of the patients and (3) clinical evolution during follow-up. Also, new techniques for evaluation of the functional significance of coronary stenoses will be studied and validated, such as calculation of the fractional flow reserve or determination of shear stress in areas that are localized within the near vicinity of the vulnerable coronary plaques.

NCT ID: NCT03391622 Completed - Clinical trials for Ischemic Heart Disease

Thrombin Generation Values and Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Results.

Start date: April 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cardiovascular diseases are the most common cause of death in the western world. Myocardial infarction pathogenesis usually involves the development of an atherosclerotic plaque and thrombus. Past research has shown a correlation between thrombin generation values and ischemic heart disease, however, to our knowledge no investigation has been done into the correlation of thrombin generation and cardiac catheterization results in ischemic heart disease patients. In the current research the investigator will investigate the correlation of thrombin generation values using calibrated automated thrombogram and cardiac catheterization results in active ischemic heart disease patients.