View clinical trials related to Critical Limb Ischemia.
Filter by:The purpose is to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of the Stellarex DCB for the treatment of stenosis or occlusions of below-the-knee arteries.
Given the importance of understanding CLI patients' outcomes and existing gaps in knowledge, there is a pressing need to collect observational data on treatment patterns, adherence to performance measures, and outcomes that are relevant to patients and clinicians. To address this need, the current study will pilot test the research infrastructure and data elements needed to build a larger, national study collecting of the CLI population. It will also provide much-needed preliminary information to identify areas of action that can be targeted in quality improvement programs for this population. Most importantly, it will provide data on health status outcomes in patients with CLI, as a function of individual patient characteristics (demographics, socio-economic and clinical background) and the treatments that patients have undergone. The PORTRAIT-CLI study will also be well equipped to identify potential disparities in the provision of care and patients' outcomes as a function of patient's characteristics.
This pilot study will investigate the safety, effectiveness and feasibility of the LimFlow Stent Graft System for creating an AV fistula in the Below The Knee (BTK) vascular system using an endovascular, minimally invasive approach for the treatment of Critical Limb Ischemia (CLI) in subjects ineligible for conventional endovascular or surgical limb salvage procedures.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the utility of the FlowMet™ device in the assessment of perfusion in subjects suspected of or being treated for critical limb ischemia, in comparison to other gold standard technologies, such as ankle brachial pulse index (ABI), skin perfusion pressure (SPP), toe brachial pulse index (TBI), transcutaneous oxygen tension (TcP02), and angiography currently in use in the clinic.
A Phase I/IIa Dose-Escalation Study Evaluating the Safety, Tolerability and Efficacy of Rejuveinix in Combination With Standard Interventional Therapy for Critical Limb Ischemia Patients with Rutherford Class 4, 5 and 6 Disease
Subjects from the AG-CLI-0206 phase 3 study that received AMG0001 will be eligible for the AG-CLI-0206-LTFU study
To assess the safety and efficacy of the paclitaxel drug-eluting balloon IN.PACT 014 versus conventional percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) for the treatment of patients with chronic total occlusions in the infrapopliteal arteries.
Induction of autologous angiogenesis in patients with critical limb ischemia using platelet lysate.
Adipose-derived regenerative cells (ADRC) will be extracted from lipoaspirate by enzymatic digestion. 10 mL of autologous ADRC suspension injected intramuscularly, close to the site of muscle injury. All patients will receive cell therapy. This is a single arm study with no control.
Patients scheduled for major extremity lower amputation to receive bone marrow cells (cBMA) injected IM in the leg proximal to the amputation in the index limb to prevent ischemic wound complications after surgery.