View clinical trials related to Myocardial Infarction.
Filter by:The RESCIND-3 study is a multicenter, double-blind, randomized controlled trial. It will be conducted in the departments of cardiology in 5 hospitals. Guangdong General Hospital ethics review board approved the study's design. 400 patients with AMI on admission will be continuously enrolled and randomly allocated to either the control or intervention group. The intervention group will receive internet-based counseling, individual drug reminders, recommendations for healthy lifestyles, cardiovascular education about AMI, and follow-up reminders four times a week, while the control group will only receive cardiology knowledge and follow-up reminders four times a week. Mobile health tools (WeChat applet) were developed through cooperation with a technology company to establish appropriate It will be blinding for investigators but all participants will be aware of whether their intervention is the 'experimental' treatment. Trained research nurses will conduct the follow up in the 4th, 8th, 12th months by telephone or face-to-face visit. All the adverse events will be collected through a self-reported section in the mobile health tools. The study will evaluate the acceptability, utility of the intervention based on Internet consulting management.
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging enables comprehensive assessment of cardiovascular function, morphology and pathology. The investigators aim to evaluate the nature and clinical significance of magnetic resonance imaging parameters in patients presenting with first acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction.
To determine the incidence and factors associated with heart rupture (HR) in acute myocardial infarction patients.
This study aims to investigate and evaluate clinical performance and quality measures for adults with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in China. Further more, the investigates like to develop quality improvement strategies and relevant tools focusing on treatment and clinical outcome in patients with STEMI. This is a annually survey , through consecutively recruiting all eligible inpatients and collecting relevant medical information, the performance of all participating hospitals. Further, quality improvement strategies including summary of clinical performance and quality measures, clinical pathways and team building will be organized for the purpose of quality improvement. All hospitals will consecutively recruit qualified patients in the same method adopted in baseline period. Then the reperfusion rates and other performance measures will be compared annually.
The rising number of patients with chest pain without myocardial infarction has made accurate diagnosis important. Unnecessary invasive coronary angiographies are increasingly prevalent. These are both costly and lead to rare but serious adverse events. Recent studies suggest cardiac Troponin I is more cardiac specific than cardiac Troponin T. In this study we will investigate whether using cardiac Troponin I lead to fewer unnecessary procedures in clinical practice (i.e. invasive coronary angiography and non-invasive tests)
The purpose of this registry is to address optimal platelet inhibition during the early management of MI patients prior to coronary angiography or CABG.
Inflammation drives atherosclerotic plaque rupture triggering most acute coronary syndromes. Despite advances in diagnosis and management of atherosclerosis, patients with myocardial infarction (MI) remain at increased risk of recurrent events. The RIPPLE study aims to examine the relationship between residual coronary inflammation detected by 68Ga-DOTATATE PET in patients treated for MI to long-term plaque progression measured by CT coronary angiography (CTCA). The association between infarct-related myocardial 68Ga-DOTATATE PET and myocardial function and viability will also be assessed.
Patients with acute coronary syndrome (MI, NSTEMI, USAP) will be included. They will be screened for statin intolernace for 6 months.
Risk assessment after myocardial infarction is critical in daily practice and evolution toward heart failure especially diastolic heart failure remains a key issue. All consecutive patients with myocardial infarction (either STEMI or NSTEMI but excluding type 2 MI) presenting at university hospital of Lille within 48 hours after symptom onset will be recruited in the RIGID-MI registry. The RIGID-MI study proposes to deeply evaluate at 1 month after MI: peripheral vascular disease, vascular stiffness, ventriculo-arterial coupling and other usual risk factors. The main objective is to identify clinical, biological and imaging parameters associated with poor prognosis, especially evolution toward diastolic heart failure, recurrence of MI, and bleeding.
Over the last two decades, considerable progress has been made in the management of Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI), both in the acute phase and in monitoring beyond the hospital phase. Nevertheless, the evolution of care practices and their impact on the mid- and long-term prognosis of patients admitted to the intensive care unit for acute myocardial infarction remain relatively little studied exhaustively. The aim of this study is to assess the profile of AMI patients, their management and follow-up in order to evaluate the relationship between these factors and outcomes.