View clinical trials related to Hypertension.
Filter by:This trial evaluates the effects of Nifedipine GITS and Amlodipine besylate on blood pressure rhythm restoration and arterial stiffness in young and middle-aged non-dipper hypertensives. Half of participants will receive Nifedipine GITS, half of half will take medicine in the morning or at night. While the other half participants will take amlodipine besylate, whom will also be assigned taking medicine in the morning or at night. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and arterial stiffness examination will be performed before and after pharmaceutical intervention.
This is a long-term open-label safety extension to the Phase 2a study of inhaled QCC374 in adult patients with PAH. This study provides the patients who completed the QCC374X2201 study with the option to continue receiving QCC374. The study will monitor the long-term safety, tolerability and efficacy of QCC374 in patients with PAH.
The purpose of this trial is to investigate safety, tolerability, pharmacodynamics (PD), and pharmacokinetics (PK) after intravenous (IV) administration of FE 204205 in patients with cirrhotic portal hypertension.
This was a non-confirmatory, randomized, placebo controlled, subject and investigator blinded study of QCC374 in PAH subjects. The study was planned to have 2 Parts: Part 1, an initial safety cohort with a 0.03 mg bid starting dose, and Part 2, a larger cohort with a 0.06 mg bid starting dose. However, due to early study termination following Part 1, Part 2 was not completed. Both study parts were comprised of four phases: a screening period for up to 28 days, a titration period of 2 weeks, a stable dose period of 14 weeks and safety follow-up period for 28 days. At the end of the treatment period of 16 weeks, eligible patients were given the option to participate in a separate long-term extension study (CQCC374X2201E1 (NCT02939599)), where all patients were treated with an individual optimal dose of QCC374.
In this study, investigators will compare chronotherapy to ABPM. Data collected will include hypertension drug therapy regimen prior to and during the study, timing of medication administration, and dose, along with the patient's office blood pressure values prior to study and one month after modification in therapy. This will enable us to explore whether it is a practical endeavor to implement ABPM as a routine process for all uncontrolled hypertension patients or whether ABPM does not seem to provide considerable value over shifting the timing of drug administration.
A pilot randomized controlled trial will be conducted to investigate the feasibility and effectiveness of a salt intake reduction intervention to young hypertension patients in Hong Kong who had high salt intake.
Women who have the diagnosis of hypertension (pre-pregnancy and pregnancy induced) and deliver an infant via vaginal delivery will be placed into two groups in the postpartum period. One group will receive Ibuprofen for pain control and the other group will be given Tylenol. Blood pressures during the postpartum period will then be collected and compared in order to see if NSAIDs use increases blood pressure.
In this study positron emission tomography (PET/CT) imaging will be used to evaluate evaluation of estrogen receptor heterogeneity and functionality in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) using the investigational radiotracer [18F]fluoroestradiol (FES).
To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the ROX Coupler used to create an arteriovenous anastomosis in the iliac region (between the iliac artery and vein) in subjects with hypertension.
The purpose of this study is to learn more about the safety and effects of switching treatments from bosentan (Tracleer) or macientan (Opsumit) to ambrisentan (Letairis) over 24 weeks in subjects with Connective Tissue Disease associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (CTD-PAH).