View clinical trials related to Myocardial Stunning.
Filter by:Heart failure (HF) and acute myocardial infarction that often follows are among the main causes of disability and death worldwide. As such, new treatments and biological drugs are needed to protect the heart against the harmful effects of ischemia and also reperfusion injury (IRI), preserve cardiac function, reduce the zone of myocardial infarction (MI), and improve patient outcomes. In this regard, it has been shown that mitochondrial dysfunction has a key role in the pathogenesis of heart ischemia, cardiomyopathy, and reperfusion injury. in this study which includes 4 groups of intervention, we try to minimize the damage by transplantation of mitochondria and administration of MSC-derived exosomes. MSC-derived exosomes limit inflammatory damage while fresh autologous exosomes limit oxidative stress.
Myocardial stunning during chronic intermittent hemodialysis is a well-described phenomenon. Little case series of patients presenting myocardial stunning during renal replacement therapy for acute kidney injury in critically ill patients are reported, with intermittent hemodialysis and continuous renal replacement therapy. However, the small sample sizes and the absence of a control arm limit their interpretation, mainly whether the myocardial stunning may be related to cardiac loading conditions variations and whether it may impact the hemodynamic. The investigator hypothesize that myocardial stunning induced by renal replacement therapy is frequent, independent from cardiac loading conditions and associated with peripheral hypoperfusion.
The Stunning in Takotsubo versus Acute Myocardial Infarction (STAMI) Study Background: Acute myocardial stunning, herein defined as the reversible loss of myocardial function, occurs in both takotsubo syndrome (TS) and ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), and can be life-threatening in both conditions. However, despite typically having considerably more pronounced myocardial stunning, TS patients have better prognosis than patients with STEMI. Despite the different relationship between extent of myocardial stunning and prognosis in TS vs STEMI, no 'head-to-head' comparison of the myocardial stunning phenotypes in TS vs STEMI has been done. Methods: The Stunning In Takotsubo and Acute Myocardial Infarction (STAMI) study is a single-center, prospective clinical study that will enroll 100 patients with STEMI and 25 patients with TS. Echocardiography, laboratory testing (including troponin and NTpro-BNP), and ECG will be done immediately after angiography and at days 1, 2, 3, 7, 14 and 30. The primary endpoint is the proportion of myocardial stunning that has resolved after 72 hours, as determined by echocardiography. Total myocardial stunning is defined as the extent of akinesia observed at day 0 that resolves by day 30.