View clinical trials related to Infarction.
Filter by:A previous study (MINTOR 1) found that 43% of ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients in Jordan had a triggering events. Fifteen years later, with changing demographics and in the post covid-19 time, we believe that triggered acute myocardial infarction might have changed in incidence and nature of the triggering events.
The purpose of this study is to collect real-world data on the TherOx DownStream System® to assess the effectiveness and cost- effectiveness of SSO2 Therapy, compared with PCI alone for treatment of patients with acute anterior MI.
This study requires the consecutive enrollment of 60 patients following the first event of acute myocardial infarction, evaluating B-Cell Activating Factor (BAFF) and methylglyoxal (MGO) levels in the acute setting (pre-reperfusion) and 3 months after reperfusion.
The objective of this study is to assess safety and feasibility of Pressure-controlled intermittent Coronary Sinus Occlusion (PiCSO) therapy in patients with extensive ST elevation inferior wall myocardial infarction presenting with TIMI 0 or 1 and symptom duration ≤ 12 hours undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) compared to standard PCI.
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-center, phase 2 clinical study in patients with NSTEMI undergoing urgent coronary angiography. Approximately 220 patients with CKD and acute NSTEMI, who are scheduled for an urgent coronary angiography (within 72 hours after admission and/or diagnosis of NSTEMI).
This study is a quasi-experimental between-group design. Using a prospective two-arm controlled exploratory study, data will be collected on an initial assessment of the effects of a specific neurological sample after thrombotic infarction (PCA infarction) who lost the ability to dream due to the infarction (experimental group) compared to a specific neurological sample after thrombotic infarction (PCA infarction) without loss of the ability to dream (comparison group) in terms of subjective and objective sleep quality and memory consolidation. Besides the importance to further elucidate the role of dreaming for sleep architecture and memory consolidation, the results of the evaluation are of great clinical relevance in a further scientific investigation regarding the treatment of a specifically neurological sample with acute thrombotic infarction.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a therapeutic strategy involving low-dose intracoronary fibrinolytic therapy with reteplase infused after coronary reperfusion will reduce the myocardial infarction size. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: 306 patients presenting at 15 hospitals in China within 12 hours of acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) due to a proximal-mid-vessel occlusion of left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery occlusion will be randomized in a 1:1:1 dose-ranging trial design. Patients will be followed up to 1 month. INTERVENTIONS: Participants will be randomly assigned to treatment with placebo (n = 102), reteplase 9mg (n = 102), or reteplase 18mg (n = 102) by manual infusion over 2 minutes after reperfusion of the infarct-related coronary artery and before stent implant. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcomewas the myocardial infarct size (% left ventricular mass) demonstrated by contrast-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) conducted from days 2 through 7 after enrollment.
In the management of acute myocardial infarction treated with primary angioplasty, despite effective epicardial clearance obtained in 95% of cases, microvascular obstruction (MVO) in the damaged territory concerns 50% of patients. The Index of Microvascular Resistance (IMR) allows early assessment of the microcirculatory state during the angioplasty procedure. A value of IMR>40 indicates MVO and is correlated with morbi-mortality. A new method for immediate evaluation of MVO using thermodilution with a new Rayflow® microcatheter has been described: it no longer allows the estimation but the measurements of absolute coronary resistance and coronary flow. We hypothesize that these measurements allows a better evaluation of the microcirculatory state after primary angioplasty, comparing to IMR. The main objective is to study the diagnostic performance of Rayflow® to predict MVO - no reflow (NR) - in ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) patients in order to determine an absolute coronary resistance threshold by thermodilution for early diagnosis of MVO. The main secondary objectives will be to compare the different microcirculatory assessment parameters with each other, not indexed and indexed to the myocardial mass at risk (coronary resistance, IMR, CFR, Resistance Reserve Ratio) and to establish a link between high resistance or IMR and the occurrence of rhythm disorders at D1, D2 and D3.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had dramatic effects on health systems and on non-COVID health care. Using French inpatient claims data and retrospectively collected clinical data, the investigators will assess the changes in hospital admissions for acute cardiovascular and neurovascular conditions in France during and after the national lockdown.
This study will evaluate the performance of the CorPath GRX System in Robotic Primary PCI (RPPCI) in the treatment of ST-elevated myocardial infarction (STEMI).