View clinical trials related to Defibrillators, Implantable.
Filter by:Bedrest is usually prescribed for patients management after cardiac electronic device implantation (CIED) in order to prevent complication. Due to the lack of guidelines available on the timing of postoperative mobilization management, the aim of the study is to evaluate the safety of early mobilization, comparing mobilization at 4-h against day-after procedure.
Multicentric, observational, retrospective registry including patients underwent implantable device implantation (pacemaker or ICD) for any indication in the period from 2009 to 2016, followed by remote monitoring. The aims of the registry are to evaluate the occurrence of atrial arrhythmias, of hospitalizations, and the mortality during a long-term follow-up.
Organized ventricular arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia (VT), torsades de pointes (TdP) and ventricular fibrillation (VF)) represent a major event in the clinical history of a patient and they can lead to hemodynamic instability and sudden cardiac death (SCD). Recurrences of ventricular arrhythmias and electrical instability have exponentially increased in the last decades and a new clinical entity called "electrical storm" (ES) has emerged as major morbidity and mortality factor. The ES is defined as a cluster of 3 or more sustained ventricular arrhythmias within 24 hours, or a sustained ventricular tachycardia lasting 12 hours or more and that does not respond to treatments. Most of the patients presenting ES are already implanted with an ICD. This is due to 3 factors: first, patients with ICD implant are at higher risk to develop ventricular arrhythmias for the cardiac disease that led to the ICD implant. Second, the device records and treats also asymptomatic or poor symptomatic arrhythmic episodes that otherwise would not be detected. Third, and more important, the device gives the possibility to survive to an arrhythmic episode, making it possible for the patient to experience an ES. The incidence of ES is debated in different studies and ranges from 10 to 60% in patients with ICD for secondary prevention and from 4 to 7% in patients with ICD for primary prevention. The aim of the ELECTRA registry is twofold: 1. To create an international registry on clinical features, optimal therapy, ablation strategy, prognosis and the effect of ICD programming on patients with ES. 2. To use the data derived from the registry for a prospective, observational study on mortality and rehospitalization rate in patients with ES.
To evaluate short-term and long-term effects by MR imaging on the technical and functional status of implantable cardioverter defibrillators.