View clinical trials related to Hypertension.
Filter by:The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to determine the impact of Mediterranean-Dash Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND) diet and aerobic training on cognition in Black adults with high systolic blood pressure. Researchers will compare Food Delivery and Cooking PLUS Aerobic Training (FoRKS+) versus Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) to evaluate the effects on cognition. Participants will complete cognitive and cardiovascular assessments, 24-hr blood pressure monitoring, standard blood pressure measurements, weight, fingerstick for HbA1c point-of-care testing, and questionnaires. Participants may also choose to participate in an optional blood draw for DNA Repair Capacity testing as a modifiable risk factor for aging-associated diseases.
This is a 2-part study evaluating the efficacy and safety of lorundrostat (an aldosterone synthase inhibitor [ASI]) for the treatment of hypertension in subjects with CKD and albuminuria while receiving stable treatment with an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEi) or an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) either in combination with dapagliflozin, or alone.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness and mechanism of action of Losartan in the treatment of coarctation of aorta.
The purpose of this study is to measure side effects of LY3971297 injection administered under the skin in healthy participants and obese participants with high blood pressure (BP). Blood tests will be performed to check how much LY3971297 gets into the bloodstream and how long it takes the body to eliminate it. This is a 5-part study. The study duration will be approximately 60 days for Part A and approximately 90 days for Parts B, C, D, and E.
The aim of this multi-country research project is to reduce the blood pressure of individuals with hypertension over a 12-month period in Bangladesh and Pakistan. A cluster randomized controlled trial (cRCT) will be conducted with two arms. The estimated sample size is around 3600 hypertensive adults. Bangladesh study participants will consist of 3600 hypertensive individuals. Approximately 10% of participants will be selected based on Bangladesh samples from Pakistan (360 hypertensive patients, four pharmacies). Community pharmacies will be randomised to one of two parallel groups (allocation ratio 1:1). Pharmacy professionals will provide educational training and counselling, as well as phone calls/mobile text messages and care coordination in the health sector as part of the intervention. The study will be conducted in three phases: baseline survey; intervention and follow-up; and endline survey with impact evaluation. The primary outcome will be BP reduction and the secondary outcomes will be BP controlled to target, treatment adherence, mortality or hospital admission rates resulting from hypertension and its related complications, incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year gained, improvement in knowledge on healthy lifestyle, change in dietary salt intake, and change in prevalence of current smokers.
A observational diagnostic study will be conducted to compare the performance of liver stiffness and spleen stiffness measured by 2D-shear wave elastography (2D-SWE) and transient elastography (TE) for diagnosing clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH) in people with compensated Advanced Chronic Liver Disease (cACLD), and explore the cut-off value of 2D-SWE for diagnosing clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH).
Pulmonary Hypertension (PH) is a condition caused by high blood pressure in the blood vessels that carry blood to the lungs. It can cause severe breathlessness and failure of the right side of the heart. Sadly it is often fatal, and life expectancy ranges from months to years. For some subtypes of PH, effective treatments exist which can improve life expectancy and quality-of-life. Accurate tools for the assessment of PH are therefore essential so that life-saving medications can be started earlier. In existing diagnostic pathways, evidence for the suspicion of PH is frequently overlooked, significantly delaying the time to diagnosis. Echocardiography (echo) is a quick, safe and well-tolerated test requested to investigate breathless patients, and which can provide useful information about the suspicion of PH. However, outside of specialist PH centres, doctors may not routinely look for and comment on the presence of clues to possible PH. The investigators think that using Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques to read echo's could make their interpretation faster and more reliable. There may also be subtle clues to the presence or severity of PH on echo, less recognisable to the human eye, which AI can identify. In this study the investigators will gather echo images from 5 specialist PH hospitals across the UK which have all been anonymised (patient's name and personal details removed). These will all be historic scans (i.e. have already taken place) and will be grouped into those with PH present (including PH sub-type) or absent. These anonymised echo images will be used to develop and train an AI tool to identify scans where PH is present, including which specific type of PH may be present. The developed AI tool will then be tested on a separate group of scans (not used in the training stage) to validate its performance.
Patients with CVID will be offered to participate in this observational trial during the routine annual visit in the outpatient clinic at the Center of chronic Immunodeficiency (CCI) of the University Medical Center Freiburg, Germany. Clinical and laboratory data at the time of presentation will be assessed. Additionally, parameters of abdominal ultrasound, duplex sonography of the liver and spleen, and liver and spleen stiffness at the time of presentation will be evaluated. If applicable, clinical and/or interventional parameters indicating clinically significant portal hypertension (i.e. presence of varices or portal-hypertensive gastropathy in esophago-gastroduodenoscopy, presence of ascites) within 12 months prior and after the index visit will be assessed. During the visit, serum/plasma samples and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) are collected and stored in an associated biobank.
This study will investigate the utility of a polypill-based strategy for patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and high risk of heart failure (HF), as assessed via the WATCH-DM risk score. Polypill therapy will consist of empagliflozin 12.5 mg, losartan 50 or 100 mg, and finerenone 10 mg daily. The study duration is 3 months, and participants will be randomized to either polypill therapy or usual care. The primary outcome is change in peak VO2 and adherence to usual care. The investigators hypothesize that the use of a polypill is feasible and improves medication adherence and peak VO2 as compared to those receiving usual care.
The purpose of the study is to learn how the study medicine called PF-07868489 is tolerated and acts in healthy adult people and people with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Part A: An investigator- and participant-blind, sponsor-open, placebo-controlled, single ascending dose study to assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of PF-07868489 in healthy adult participants. Part B: A 24-week, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study to assess the safety, tolerability, PK, and pharmacodynamics (PD) of PF-07868489 in adult participants with PAH.