View clinical trials related to Heart Valve Diseases.
Filter by:Reiki is an energy-based healing therapy using light touch. Manual therapy is a technique using light effleurage. These complimentary healing services are utilized to promote relaxation, sleep, improve emotions, and decrease pain; however, more research is required since sample sizes in the literature were small, subjects were generally healthy (not hospitalized), and subjects had multiple medical backgrounds. Only 1 study focused on cardiac surgery patients. We aim to learn if Reiki and manual therapy enhances postoperative clinical outcomes for patients after first time coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) and/or cardiac valve surgery. A randomized, controlled non-blinded study will enroll a sample of a minimum of 272 patient (136 per group), based on a power analysis using the primary outcome. The intervention group will receive usual care plus Reiki and manual therapy, with Reiki delivered first. Total therapies time is 20 minutes. Reiki and manual therapy will be delivered for 3 consecutive days beginning on the day after endotracheal tube removal. The usual care group will receive 20 minutes of uninterrupted rest, which is part of usual postoperative care. Outcomes are depression, anxiety, pain, night time sleep, new onset atrial fibrillation, hospital length of stay, all-cause 30-day hospital readmissions, narcotic drug burden and post-operative complications.
Background: Recent recommendations from the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) are multidisciplinary cardiac rehabilitation including therapeutic exercises for patients after heart valve surgery unless there is insufficient evidence to decide whether therapeutic exercise cardiac training should be provided for such patients. As well, resistance training is an extremely safe systemic physical activity, and it has no contraindications if well-oriented, in addition to being the fastest-growing physical activity in the world in several practitioner settings. Purpose: This study was conducted to investigate the effect of early resistance training on the fitness level (vo2 max) and (PR interval) of patients post-valve replacement surgery.
It is well documented in the literature that myocardial revascularization during valve surgery increases the risk of early mortality and morbidity. According to the most recent version of the European Guidelines, the possibility of myocardial revascularization via coronary artery bypass should be evaluated in patients with an indication for surgical treatment of heart valve disease but with coronary artery stenosis ≥ 50-70%. In this study, patients hospitalized for surgical heart valve disease, with occasional pre-operative finding of ≥ 50-70% coronary artery stenosis, without angina, are examined. After interdisciplinary discussion in the Heart Team, it was decided not to treat coronary artery disease during valve surgery. The aim is to evaluate the short and medium-term results of this "conscious omission".
Aortic valve bicuspid disease is the most common congenital heart disease. It affects 0.5-2% of the population and is associated with an increased risk of developing aortic or ascending aortic valve complications. There is no agreement regarding the opportunity for a "prophylactic" simultaneous aortic valve replacement in the case of mild or moderate aortic valve disease in the bicuspid valve, in patients with an indication for replacement of the ascending aorta due to an aneurysm involving its supra-coronary tract. The aim of this study is to evaluate the long-term evolution of mild and moderate aortic valve disease in untreated bicuspid valve during supracoronary ascending aortic replacement surgery at our institution.
Bicuspid Aortic Valve (BAV) is a common congenital heart disease with an incidence ranging from 0.16% in Asians to 2% in Westerners. Asian populations with BAV have different morphological characteristics from those of the Western populations, and further elucidation of these differences will serve as a guide for the treatment and follow-up of Asian patients. Therefore, we conducted this multicentre retrospective study to analysis the clinical features, long-term development and surgical prognosis of BAV .
Comparative study between Phase Contrast , Modified Simpson Rule and Myocardial Strain Analysis methods of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging in assessment of Corrected Estimated Ejection Fraction in Valvular Heart Disease To Evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of different methods of cardiac MRI to assess estimated corrected ejection fraction in valvular heart diseases.
In this prospective, single-arm study, we will look at the initiation, participation, sustained engagement, and safety of 100 adult subjects (ages 45 years or older) with recent (within the past 60 days) clinician referral to CR who are offered CTR via the RecoveryPlus platform. We want to understand the effectiveness of the RecoveryPlus platform in engaging participants in CR while remaining a safe alternative for the delivery of evidence-based CR content. The primary hypothesis of this study is that the RecoveryPlus CTR platform and patient-facing mobile application provide a safe alternative to traditional in-person CR, and demonstrate a high rate of initiation, participation, and engagement in CR exercise programming than traditional modes of CR delivery, as documented in the literature. Current in-person and non-personalized CR programming lacks RecoveryPlus' convenient remote access, easy-to-use digital tools to support independent, autonomous exercise, and a platform to facilitate engagement and feedback between patients and EPs.
The goal of this randomized trial is to compare the diagnostic yield of a screen-like early diagnosis strategy to usual primary care to detect coronary artery disease (CAD), atrial fibrillation (AF), heart failure (HF), and/or valvular heart disease (VHD) in community people aged 50-80 years who participate in the Utrecht Health Project. The diagnosis strategy consists of a questionnaire with questions related to symptoms suggestive of CAD, AF or HF, a focused physical examination, laboratory testing, electrocardiography, and echocardiography.
A prospective, open, non-randomized, multicenter, clinical trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Edwards EWJ-202 transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement system in the treatment of patients with at least severe tricuspid regurgitation despite medical therapy. Subjects will be followed at discharge, 30 days, 6 months and annually through 5 years.
Evaluation of the safety and efficacy of early discharge (24 hours) after transfemoral transcatheter aortic prosthesis implantation (TAVI).