View clinical trials related to Heart Diseases.
Filter by:The key technology research and standard evaluation system of elderly heart valve disease evaluation is to further establish a domestic multi center and large sample full information big data platform of elderly heart valve disease based on the previous Chinese elderly valve disease cohort and clinical research platform and the national valve disease surgery data platform.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of Synergy XD stent and Synergy Megatron™ Stent in the "real world" daily practice as compared with the other drug-eluting stents.
Infants and children with heart conditions require treatment in children's hospitals that are typically located in large cities. This creates challenges for children and families who need to travel long distances to come to appointments. Providing quality care to children with heart disease has further been challenged by the COVID-19 pandemic, with a shift towards decreased in-person contact and an increase in virtual visits, where assessment by doctors and nurses is more limited. This research study will look at how families of children with heart disease access care and how investigators can improve care with virtual technologies. This will involve testing a new home-based virtual care platform that uses Bluetooth technology to connect weight scales, oxygen measuring devices and blood pressure cuffs with a smartphone app, allowing parents to easily use these devices and send accurate data directly to the cardiology team. Investigators will obtain feedback from families, patients, and healthcare providers about how this helped or did not help them, and adjust the technology as needed to make it better.
The INTERCLIMA (Interventional Strategy for Non-culprit Lesions With Major Vulnerability Criteria Identified by Optical Coherence Tomography in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome) is a multi-center, prospective, randomized trial of optical coherence tomography (OCT)-based versus physiology-based (i.e. fractional flow reserve[FFR]/instantaneous Wave-Free Ratio[iFR]/resting full-cycle ratio[RFR]) treatment of intermediate (40-70% diameter stenosis at quantitative coronary angiography), non-culprit coronary lesions in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients undergoing coronary angiography. About 1400 patients with ACS will be randomized into the study at approximately 40 sites worldwide.
The study team will generate preliminary data on whether patients with cardiac amyloidosis feel better when their beta-blocker is stopped. To achieve this objective, 20 N-of-1 trials (on vs. off) will be conducted, and the study team will subsequently interview participants to better understand their outcomes. Each subject will participate in 2 periods lasting between up to 6 weeks each based on each patient's health profile. We will also engage stakeholders to understand the acceptability and feasibility of deprescribing N-of-1 trials. The N-of-1 trials will be iteratively refined in real-time based on feedback.
When aortic valve-area is <1.0cm2 and transvalvular mean-gradient is >40mmHg, the diagnosis of severe aortic stenosis (AS) is straightforward. However, some patients present with an apparently reduced valve-area, despite transvalvular-gradient <40mmHg; Low-flow, low-gradient aortic stenosis (LFLG AS). When a patient with LFLG AS also presents with LVEF <50%, guidelines recommends performing a Low-Dose Dobutamine-echocardiography (LDDE) to confirm true-severe AS. However, nearly 30% of patients with LFLG AS do not show an adequate respond to Dobutamine. More commonly, patients present with the combination of LFLG AS, despite LVEF≥50%. In this group of patients the use of LDDE remains undisclosed. The purpose of this study is to examine the safety and diagnostic usefulness of LDDE in patients with LFLG AS with LVEF≥50%. Furthermore we will examine factors associated with inadequate response to LDDE. 150 symptomatic and/or asymptomatic patients with LFLG and LVEF≥50% and a control group with LVEF<50% will be enrolled at the Department of Cardiology, OUH. Patients will undergo clinical evaluation including LDDE, blood analyses, CT-scan and cardiac Mri. Only a limited number of studies examine the possible use of LDDE in patients with LFLG AS and LVEF≥50% and no study has been performed documenting the safety and feasibility.
Despite the rapid development of medical and nursing technology, the prognosis of valvular heart disease has been greatly improved. However, compared with young patients, the mortality and adverse event rate of elderly patients with valvular heart disease are still high, surgical complications are more frequent and hospitalization time is longer. The complexity of valvular heart disease and the poor prognosis in the elderly forces us to continue to look for other potential prognostic factors. In addition to the adverse outcomes caused by disease factors, elderly patients with valvular heart disease also have the gradual decline of physiological and psychological reserve function caused by age factors. These adverse outcomes include osteopenia, disability, prolonged hospitalization and even death are all closely related to frailty. Frailty is 'a biologic syndrome of decreased reserve and resistance to stressors, resulting from cumulative declines across multiple physiologic systems, and causing vulnerability to adverse outcomes. The essence of frailty is the decline of individual resistance, which eventually leads to the increase of individual brittleness and susceptibility to adverse health outcomes. At present, the research in the field of elderly vulnerable groups of cardiovascular disease in China started late, mostly focusing on the study of pathological mechanism, the introduction of evaluation tools, conceptual analysis and so on. Almost all of the existing studies are about the debilitation status of elderly patients with heart valve disease, and most of them mainly try to find the influencing factors of debilitation from the aspects of patients' physical diseases, ignoring the impact of factors such as the mental health status of the elderly on debilitation, there are few reports of short-term adverse events in elderly patients with valvular heart disease. This study will analyze the influencing factors of the weakness of elderly patients with valvular diseases from the multi-dimensional aspects of demographic data, physical diseases, psychology and society, and track the short-term prognosis of patients with death, fall and unconventional rehospitalization, so as to provide a research basis for relevant research in the future.
Physical activity is a key element in cardiac rehabilitation and prevention of cardiovascular mortality and hospitalizations. After cardiac rehabilitation programs end, physical activity levels and participation in continued cardiac rehabilitation declines. The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility a mobile health intervention with text messages and behavior change theory in patients with cardiovascular disease for a duration of 3 months after completion of a cardiac rehabilitation program. An intervention consisting of action planning, text messages, and coordinator support is tested in a feasibility trial design with 40 expected participants.
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UTHSCSA) will serve as the site for the RURAL Study Coordinating Center, led by PI Vasan Ramachandran, MD. The primary function of the Study Coordinating Center (SCC) is to serve as an administrative liaison between all of the RURAL study's cores. The SCC schedules, facilitates, and hosts, all RURAL meetings including preparation for Observational Study Monitoring Board (OSMB) meetings, and maintains direct communication with the study's program officers at NHLBI. The SCC monitors the overall progress of RURAL and keeps all RURAL cores abreast of study updates through meetings, emails, newsletters. It also maintains the official RURAL website and serves as an administrator for investigators seeking to collaborate with RURAL through the submission of Ancillary Studies. The SCC will have no direct interaction with any participants, nor will it have access to identifiable data.
Prospective, single-arm, multi-center study to evaluate safety and effectiveness of the Autus Size-Adjustable Valve in pediatric patients aged 18 months to 16 years requiring surgical pulmonary valve replacement. The Autus Valve may be expanded pre-implant to match the subject's body size. Subjects will be evaluated prior to the Autus Valve implant procedure, immediately post-implant, at hospital discharge, 30 days, 6 months, and annually through 10 years. The Autus Valve may be expanded post-implant via transcatheter balloon dilation to accommodate growth of the subject. In subjects who undergo a post-implant valve expansion, follow-up will continue for a minimum of 1 year after the post-implant valve expansion procedure.