View clinical trials related to Hypertension.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to collect preliminary data on the feasibility, acceptability, and potential effects of a novel, remotely delivered resistance training program.
The goal of the study is to promote equitable hypertension (HTN) management across the diverse patient population found in Los Angeles County Department of Health Services (LAC DHS) clinics. To achieve this goal, the study team will conduct provider- and patient-focused outreach strategies to understand how to best support adoption of blood pressure management practices already available within LAC DHS. LAC DHS clinics will be randomly assigned to one of three study conditions: 1) provider-focused outreach, 2) patient-focused outreach, and 3) usual outreach. The study will occur across 3 years with patient- and provider-focused outreach occurring in Year 1 and 2. In Year 3, study initiated patient- and provider-focused outreach will stop, and clinic use of patient- and provider-focused outreach practices will be observed by the study team. Provider-focused outreach includes increasing cultural awareness of factors that hinder and support blood pressure control, increasing access to blood pressure medications, and providing blood pressure management education. Patient-focused outreach includes using culturally sensitive educational materials and reminders to improve patient understanding of blood pressure, education on how to manage the condition, and increasing awareness of available blood pressure management resources. Clinics assigned to the usual outreach condition will operate as per usual in Year 1 but will receive patient- and provider-focused outreach in Year 2.
The goal of this study is to implement and evaluate a randomized pilot study of a 4-month Nutrition-enhanced community health worker (CHW) intervention for primary care patients with nutrition insecurity and poorly controlled hypertension. The nutrition intervention will be added to the pre-existing Massachusetts General Hospital CHW hypertension (Basic CHW) program that provides hypertension education, coaching about adherence to medications and primary care visits, and home BP cuffs and promotion of BP self-monitoring over the course of approximately 4 months.
Hypertension is extremely common amongst the elderly, typically manifesting as a silent disease with potentially devastating consequences if left undetected and untreated. Such consequences include stroke, myocardial infarction, kidney and eye disease. Opportunistic screening for hypertension is therefore standard in clinical practice. Currently, the standard of care for screening in the western world is with 24-hour ambulatory cuff-based devices which are often intolerable, particularly for elderly patients. Several novel cuffless wearables have been developed to overcome the limitations of cuff-based monitors. These devices offer significant advantages over cuff-based devices, including improved patient tolerance and user acceptability. Numerous cuffless monitors are now commercially available. However, validation of such devices is challenging as there is no current universal standard for validating such devices.5 This is highlighted by the heterogenous and often inadequate study methods used to demonstrate accuracy of commercially available cuffless devices for blood pressure measurements. Indeed, the uncertainty about their merit is reflected in international guidelines. The 2023 European Society of Hypertension guidelines currently do not recommend routine use of such devices in clinical practice for evaluation of blood pressure. There are limited clinical trials comparing 24-hour cuff-based devices directly to cuffless devices, and even fewer specifically in an elderly population where they may be particularly advantageous due to design features that improve tolerability. This study thus aims to address this important gap in the literature to better understand if cuffless devices provide reliable blood pressure measurements in the elderly population by directly comparing these devices to the current standard of care in blood pressure evaluation. The Aktiia device will be used as a surrogate for cuffless wearables while a standard 24-hour ambulatory cuff-based device will represent cuff-based devices. The Aktiia device is a cuffless solution worn as a bracelet on the wrist. It contains optical sensors which collect photoplethysmography signals from arteries in the patient's wrist and uses these to estimate blood pressure. This device is commercially available and clinically validated for use in patients up to age 85.
Exploring and establishing new non-invasive risk stratification techniques for portal hypertension based on E imaging technology for measuring liver and spleen stiffness is an urgent need in this field of research.
OBPM_HTN2024 study was designed by AKTIIA SA to evaluate how a hypertensive population, reflective of the United States and encompassing a range of phenotypes, perceives the Aktiia 24/7 device (Aktiia G1) during their first 3 months of use.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about low-grade inflammation in healthy individuals and individuals with overweight or obesity. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Whether it is possible to predict low-grade inflammation - What are the medical, biological, and lifestyle variables related to low-grade inflammation? Participants will be asked to: 1. Attend a general medical visit to collect vital signs, anthropometric measurements, and collect blood samples. 2. Complete questionnaires and collect a stool sample at home.
The purpose of the proposed observational study is to explore the relations between data-driven personalization and equitable health outcomes in a digital health intervention (DHI) for hypertension management. In the current intervention, behavioral reinforcement learning is applied to personalize intervention content to maximize the behavioral outcomes of three target behaviors critical for effective hypertension management: clinical encounters, medication adherence, and self-monitoring of blood pressure (SMBP).
Aim of the study : 1. to determine the response to each treatment plan. 2. to determine when to choose specific treatment method. 3. to determine complication of each type of treatment method
Several clinical trials have produced variable conclusions regarding the effects of intensive blood pressure (BP) lowering in post-EVT acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) patients. Although two trials indicate harm from very intensive target-based treatment (SBP <130 mmHg), the others neutral effects in the SBP range 140-160 mmHg. The ENCHANTED3/MT domain of the ACT-GLOBAL platform trial aims to test different approaches to the treatment of elevated SBP in post-EVT AIS patients to find an optimal BP management strategy. ENCHANTED3/MT will randomize (1:1:1) up to 2,000 patients with SBP ≥150 mmHg post-EVT to conservative (no or minimal SBP reduction by 5-10mmHg or a target of 175-180mmHg if very-high baseline SBP [≥180mmHg]), moderate (SBP reduction by 10-20mmHg or a target of 160 ± 5, whichever is higher; no control if low-high baseline SBP [150-160mmHg]), or intensive (SBP reduction by 30-50mmHg or a target of 140±5 mmHg, whichever is higher) BP management.