View clinical trials related to Peripheral Arterial Disease.
Filter by:The purpose of this observational study is to evaluate the performance and safety of endovascular treatment with stenting (Optimed Sinus Superflex 635 or Qualimed Pontos-pp) or balloon angioplasty (Cardionovum Legflow or Optimed Nylotrack .035 + .018) according to current practice. The goal of the study will be achieved by assessing binary restenosis with duplex ultrasound, peri- and postoperative complications, technical success, target lesion revascularization, amputation and clinical outcome.
The objective of this prospective, multi-center, single arm study is to obtain further data on the safety and performance of the StellarexTM 0.014" OTW Drug-coated Angioplasty Balloon in the treatment of lesions in "below the knee" popliteal (P3 segment) and infra-popliteal arteries according to the Instructions for Use in Rutherford-Becker Classification (RCC) 3, 4 and 5 patient populations. This study will be conducted in Europe across up to 10 centers in up to 75 subjects. Office visits will occur at 30 days, 6, 12, and 24 months post-index procedure.
Aim of this prospective clinical study is the Evaluation of the Effect of Compression Therapy on the Microcirculation in Patients With Leg Edema and Mild to Moderate PAD or Diabetes Mellitus.
The BELTHROM trial investigates the efficacy and safety of the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System recanalization of acute and subacute thrombotic femoropopliteal occlusions (Acute Limb Ischemia (ALI); Rutherford I, IIa, IIb and III). An expected total of 50 patients will be treated. The lesion is located within the femoropopliteal artery (native, in-stent or bypass graft). During the procedure, the device is introduced, activated and slowly advanced into the occlusion to clean out the wall-adherent thrombotic material. If residual underlying stenosis of >30% persists additional endovascular treatment can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Patients will be invited for a follow-up visit at 1 month post-procedure. The primary efficacy endpoint is the technical success of the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System, defined as removal of ≥90% acute clot as documented by angiography. The primary safety endpoint is defined as the absence of device-related complications, which is defined as embolization, perforation or dissection caused by the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System. Secondary endpoints include procedural success, percent clot removed by the ClearLumen II Peripheral Thrombectomy System, clinical success at 1 month follow-up visit, 30-day target lesion revascularization, 30-days serious adverse events and 30-days adverse events.
This trial is a First in Human early feasibility study of a novel atherectomy device to treat peripheral artery disease. The trial is a prospective, single arm design that will enroll 10 patients at 1 - 2 sites. Patients will be followed at 30 days and 6 months to evaluate vessel patency following treatment. Safety will be assessed by monitoring adverse events throughout the study. Safety and Efficacy will be evaluated by comparing study results to established performance criteria,
HI-PAD is a placebo controlled double-blind randomized pilot clinical trial to determine whether VM202 may improve walking ability in people with lower extremity peripheral artery disease (PAD).
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) affects mainly elderly patients. The ankle brachial index (ABI) and ultrasound imaging are the standard diagnostic tools in PAD diagnostic and severity estimation. Measurements are generally performed by a vascular physician. However, access to medical specialist is becoming increasingly difficult with long waiting times while the aging of the population increases, while most of these patients are seen by the general practitioner. To date, there is a lot of data in the literature on the value of using various ambulatory devices in the diagnosis and severity estimation of PAD but studied one by one. The investigators propose to compare the measurements made by a series of simple non-invasive ambulatory tools with the measurements performed by the vascular specialist. The investigators wish to demonstrate that a series of simple and economical tools, available to paramedical health professionals can diagnose PAD and evaluate ts severity the reducing the direct and indirect associated costs.
The GIFT pilot study will investigate the optimal subcutaneous dose and safety of subcutaneously administered unacylated ghrelin in older people with peripheral artery disease (PAD).
Prospective interventional study. The aim is to analyze the effect of usual ongoing treatments over microvascular cutaneous response to galvanic current applications (CIV: current induced vasodilatation) with tissue vitality (TiVi) system on the forearm of subjects referred for ultrasound investigations due to suspicion of peripheral disease. Hypothesis is that the use of aspirin (even at low dose) abolishes the response. This test could make it possible to detect the functional effects of low dose aspirin without using biological tests. A routine clinical application could be to use this CIV to verify adherence to aspirin.
The T.I.N.T.I.N. study investigates the safety and efficacy of the combination therapy with the Luminor drug coated balloon (DCB) and the iVolution stent in the treatment of TASC C and D femoropopliteal lesions. An expected total of 100 patients will be treated in the scope of this study. The lesion is located within the native superficial femoral artery and/or the popliteal artery. Prior to dilatation with the Luminor DCB, pre-dilatation with the Oceanus balloon is mandatory. After dilatation with the Luminor DCB, stenting with the iVolution stent need to be performed. Post-dilatation can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Patients will be invited for a follow-up visit at 1, 6, 12, 24, 36, 48 and 60 month post-procedure. The primary efficacy endpoint of the study is defined as the freedom from clinically-driven target lesion revascularization (TLR) at 12 months. Secondary endpoints include primary patency rate at 6 and 12 months, freedom from clinically-driven TLR at 6, 24, 36, 48 and 60 months, clinical success at 1, 6, 12, 24, 36, 48 and 60 months and freedom from serious adverse events at pre-discharge, 1, 6, 12, 24, 36, 48 and 60 months follow-up.