View clinical trials related to Death, Sudden.
Filter by:Sympathetic tone is important in cardiac arrhythmogenesis. The simultaneous recording of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) and electrocardiogram (ECG) was obtained by invasive method. The purpose of this protocol is to further develop this recording method to turn it into a new non-invasive tool for arrhythmia prediction and detection. This method may also be useful in validating the results of surgical procedures aimed at sympathetic denervation
A multicenter single arm open label evaluation of the ASSURE Wearable Cardioverter Defibrillator (WCD) defibrillation waveform in adult cardiac patients
Risk prediction in in inherited heart rhythm conditions that may cause sudden cardiac arrest or death is difficult. Sometimes the risks may be low but the loss of life in an otherwise healthy young individual is catastrophic. Clinicians often treat to the extreme to prevent this and so often those at unknown risk for a serious cardiac event are treated with an implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) to protect against sudden death even though the risk is low or unknown. ICDs them selves are not without adverse events such as needing battery replacements, mechanical complications, inappropriate shocks and body image and self esteem issues for the patient. This study will use an inject able monitor that is less invasive to monitor inherited heart rhythm patients long term to help gather long term heart rhythm data (3 years) on patients with an inherited heart rhythm that will help to detect symptoms of dangerous heart rhythms so that the appropriate care can be provided.
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is one of the major causes of mortality in adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD). Risk stratification for sudden cardiac death in this patient group is challenging and at the current moment there are no clear guidelines on implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) implantation for primary prevention of SCD in this young patient population. The reason for this is the fact that this is a heterogenous group of patients and SCD is a relatively rare event. Because of this there have been no prospective studies on SCD in ACHD. However, multiple retrospective studies on ICD implantation in ACHD have shown that this treatment does appear to be effective. Researchers from the Academic Medical Center have identified several risk factors for sudden cardiac death. A risk score was created using this data, which has been validated in an internal and external cohort in a retrospective setting. The design of this study, including the conception of the risk score, its calculation method and validation will be published in an international scientific peer-reviewed journal. The hypothesis of this study is that the risk score accurately predicts the risk of sudden cardiac death.
It is now well established that infants should be placed on the back only in a SleepSack without coverage or plush or pillow on a firm mattress in a bedroom. Despite these old recommendations of good practice, deviations are observed and some infants are most always lying according to the recommended position. The goal is to assess the impact of an information campaign of staffs maternity of the CHU of Reims on the practices of the sleeping of infants to motherhood, and then at the home of the parents.
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a lifesaving procedure used to treat severe forms of heart and/or lung failure. It works by the principal of replacing the function of these organs by taking blood from the patient, provide it with oxygen outside the body and return it to the patient in one continuous circuit. Because of the evaluability of better technology, the use of ECMO has exponentially risen over the last decade. This treatment is very invasive and carries a number of risks. It is mostly used in situations where it seems likely that the patient would otherwise die and no other less invasive measure could change this. Still in large registries 50-60% of patients die which is often due to complications associated with the treatment. One of the most important complication is caused by the activation of clotting factors during the contact with the artificial surfaces of the device. This can lead to clot formation inside the patient or the device. To counterbalance this anticoagulation is needed. Because of the consumption of clotting factors and the heparin therapy bleeding complications are also very common in ECMO. Clinicians are challenged to balance these competing risks and are often forced to transfuse blood products to treat these conditions, which comes with additional risks for the patient. Many experienced centres have reported thromboembolic and bleeding events as the most important contributor to a poor outcome of this procedure. However, no international study combining the experience of multiple centres to compare their practice and identify risk factors which can be altered to reduce these risks. This study has been endorsed by the international ECMONet and aims to observe the practice in up to 50 centres and 500 patients worldwide to generate the largest ever published database on this topic. It will concentrate on patients with severe heart failure and will be able to identify specific risk factors for thromboembolic and bleeding events. Some of these factors may be modifiable by change in practice and can subsequently be evaluated in clinical trials. Some of these factors may include target values for heparin therapy and infusion of clotting factors. This study will directly improve patient management by informing clinicians which measures are associated with the best outcome and indirectly helps building trials to increase the evidence further.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is very common. The thickened heart muscle can disrupt the normal functioning of the heart's electrical system, resulting in fast or irregular heartbeats. Today, there are no reliable means to identify HCM patients at risk of sudden death. The CardioInsightâ„¢ has recently been developed by Medtronic for non-invasive advanced cardiac mapping system. The CardioInsightâ„¢ Noninvasive 3D Mapping System is a non-invasive mapping system that collects chest ECG signals and combines these signals with CT scan data to produce and display simultaneous, bi-atrial and biventricular, 3-D cardiac maps. It is a monocentric, prospective, comparative and analytical study. 20 HCM patients will be recruited in the National Reference Center for inherited cardiac diseases of Lyon. The 3D-propagation maps of 10 well phenotyped and genotyped HCM patients with previous VF (ventricular fibrillation) will be compared to 10 HCM patients without previous VF. After consent signed, Holter ECG, scanner and CardioInsightTM 3D_ECG mapping will be planned in the month following the inclusion. 12-lead ECG, 24h holter ECG, cardiac scanner will be performed as standard procedure of each center in the current health care of the patient. The widespread screening of HCM patients with 3D high-density noninvasive mapping should improve the risk-benefit ratio of implantable defibrillator therapy. It is expected that more patients at risk will benefit from this device.
Design: Prospective, non-randomized single center study at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. Purpose: The purpose of this study is to prospectively evaluate a specific analgesia protocol designed to allow for same day discharge following implantation of the subcutaneous implantable cardiac defibrillator (S-ICD) Enrollment: Up to 40 subjects will be enrolled. Subject Population: Consecutive patients undergoing S-ICD implantation under general anesthesia or monitored anesthesia care. Endpoints: Rate of successful completion of the protocol; Procedural complications; Serial assessment of patient perception of pain.
Assessment of the psychological benefit of the proposition by prehospital medical team of a sudden death counselling on family members of sudden death victims.
Out-of-hospital arrest can occur from multiple etiologies. In patients without an obvious reason for the sudden-death event, diagnostic evaluation is not clear. This study is to determine if early imaging with a head-to-pelvis CT scan may improve diagnostic accuracy, speed of diagnosis and potentially clinical outcomes.