View clinical trials related to Heart Diseases.
Filter by:The study aims to identify the Following: - 1. incidence and mortality of cardiac Surgery associated -AKI based on the new consensus diagnostic systems of KDIGO (Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes). 2. use of biomarkers for the early detection of clinical and subclinical cardiac Surgery associated-AKI. 3. risk factors and prediction models of cardiac Surgery associated-AKI. 4. optimal cardiac surgical procedures including conventional versus minimally invasive approaches, on-pump versus off-pump, and optimal management of cardiac surgical support including duration of CPB, perfusion pressure, hemodilution, and hypothermia during CPB. 5. controversial pharmacologic therapies for the prevention and treatment of cardiac Surgery associated-AKI including statins, sodium bicarbonate, and N-acetylcysteine (NAC).
This study is designed to verify the safety and efficacy of Lepu® NeoVas™ Bioabsorbable Coronary Artery Rapamycin-eluting Stent System combined with different antiplatelet therapies in the treatment of coronary heart disease.
Due to better medical care, a growing number of patients with congenital heart disease reach adulthood. A large number of these patients needs a redo cardiac surgery. No guidelines of best transfusion practice exist for this patient population. A retrospective analysis of all adult patients with congenital heart disease undergoing cardiac surgery between 2000 and 2020 will be performed. Transfusion practices and their influence on outcome at 30 days and 6 month will be evaluated.
It aims to compare the effects of a professional -led support programme using a mobile application versus telephone advice on clients at risk of coronary heart disease. A multi-centre, single-blinded, randomized controlled trial will be conducted. 168 Clients who are at risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), able to use a smart phone will be randomized into the App Support group (App group) or the Nursing Telephone advice (NTA) group . All participants will receive same nursing educational briefing related to CHD. The App Group will additional receive an app use to support their self care whereas the NTA group will receive nursing telephone advice for 20 minutes monthly. Health outcomes will be collected at baseline (T0), 1 months (T1), 3 months (T2). Data analysis will be conducted using a Generalized Estimating Equations model to assess differential changes in all outcome variables.
Amyloid heart disease is an accumulation of fibrillar proteins in the extracellular sector of the heart. Identified on echocardiography as Ventricular hypertrophy. The investigation of a Left Ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is the most frequent discovery circumstance of amyloid heart disease. Pathophysiological mechanisms poorly understood, resulting in late diagnosis. Transthyretin amyloid heart disease (CATTR) is the most common form of cardiac amyloidosis in the West Indies due to an abnormally high frequency of the Val122Ile and Val107Ile mutations of the transthyretin gene in this population. Val122Ile and Val107Ile mutated-transthyretin are the substitution of valine for isoleucine at codon 122 of the TTR gene ( V122I) and at codon 107 of the TTR gene (V107I). Complications of CATTR are functional changes in heart cells or even death due to mechanical abnormalities (loss of contractility and increased wall stiffness cardiac arousal and conduction disturbances). These disorders result from an electrical abnormality of the heart the reason why the cardiologist performs preventive performance of electrophysiological explorations with EnSite Precision™. It's a registration system used to detect foci of necrosis within the myocardium. Amyloid deposits are areas devoid of electrical activity. Do they detectable by the EnSite Precision™ recording system ?
The purposes of this study is to standardize the process of formulating exercise prescriptions for coronary heart disease(CHD), verify the safety and effectiveness of exercise prescriptions, and establish a database of exercise prescriptions for CHD, with a view to providing new solutions for cardiac rehabilitation.
The investigators evaluate the effects of intracoronary and intravenous administration of nicorandil on cardiac sympathetic nerve activity and distribution in patients with acute myocardial infarction undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention
The study done to identify the relation between the presence of abnormal clinical cardiac findings and the echocardiographic findings in newborn infants.
What are the experiences of staff and participants in phase 3 cardiac rehabilitation during the Covid-19 pandemic, and what impacts have adapted delivery had on participants' physical activity levels, mental health and well-being? Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a vital service for individuals diagnosed and treated for cardiovascular disease (e.g., heart attack, angina, valve disease). The service helps to improve recovery rates through supporting patients with beneficial lifestyle changes (e.g., physical activity, healthy eating), and coping with emotional distress following a traumatic cardiac event. The environment in which CR is being delivered has changed in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, including remote working practices, and in some instances postponing of rehabilitation. Despite the public health rationale for such measures, it is essential to consider the impact of adapted services on patient's mental health and physical activity participation, and to consider staff experiences in using remote working regimes. The current study aims to recruit staff and patients from phase 3 cardiac rehabilitation across Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust to explore their experiences of adapted services through a mixed methods study design. Staff and patients will be interviewed over the phone to explore experiences and impacts of Covid-19 with their rich in-depth viewpoints and stories. In addition, during an 8 week period of rehabilitation, patients will be asked to report and record their physical activity levels with diaries and accelerometers (a wrist worn device measuring movement), record their resting blood pressure and heart rate, and complete questionnaires to assess changes in mental health. This study could help to understand the impact of the pandemic on cardiac patients recovery and on staff's experiences implementing programme changes to assist in preparing for the future of CR post COVID 19.
Patients undergoing treatment for heart disease through percutaneous interventions admitted to intensive care units often suffer from sleep deprivation, with multifactorial factors being the precursors of this problem. Sleep deprivation has a negative impact on rehabilitation, with increased morbidity and mortality. Therefore, implementing non-pharmacological measures for this population is essential for better quality care, as well as more satisfactory experiences. The Objectives are to evaluate whether the non-pharmacological intervention that includes the use of eye masks and hearing protectors has an influence on the quality of sleep of patients undergoing percutaneous interventions for the treatment of heart diseases admitted to the intensive care unit, to compare the quality of sleep between patients according to sociodemographic and clinical variables and to identify whether anxiety is a factor associated with sleep quality in patients undergoing percutaneous interventions for the treatment of heart disease in patients admitted to the intensive care unit. Randomized clinical trial blinded to the steps of data collection and data analysis, with two groups of participants in which the intervention with eye masks and ear protectors will be evaluated. The inclusion criteria in the study will be patients undergoing percutaneous intervention treatment for heart disease over the age of 18, preserved communication skills and understanding. The study site will be a cardiac intensive care unit in a private hospital of high complexity in the city of São Paulo. The intervention will be carried out during the period of hospitalization in the intensive care unit, by nurses trained by the researcher from 9 pm until the patient awakens, and variables related to sleep quality, anxiety, pain, delirium and length of stay will be collected. in bed. The sample will consist of 80 patients divided into two groups (intervention and control) and the data will be analyzed with descriptive statistics, with Student t test and Mann Whitney test for comparison between groups and with Chi-square test and Spearman for analysis of categorical variables. . Relative risk, odds ratio will be calculated and the level of significance adopted will be 5%. It is intended to know if the non-pharmacological intervention brings benefits to reduce sleep deprivation and contributes to better clinical outcomes.