View clinical trials related to Peripheral Arterial Disease.
Filter by:To assess preliminary safety and efficacy of the Serranator™ Alto PTA Serration Balloon Catheter in subjects with atherosclerotic peripheral artery disease of the superficial femoral and popliteal arteries.
prospective interventional study. The aim is to analyse the effect of usual ongoing treatments over the microvascular cutaneous response to galvanic current application (Current induced vasodilation ; CIV) on the forearm of subjects referred for ultrasound investigations due to suspicion of peripheral artery disease. Hypothesis is that the use of aspirin (even at low dose) abolishes the response .
Investigation of the clinical efficacy and safety of dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel and cilostazol versus clopidogrel alone in preventing ischemic vascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes and symptomatic peripheral arterial disease.
To assess the safety and efficacy of the paclitaxel drug-eluting balloon IN.PACT 014 versus conventional percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) for the treatment of patients with chronic total occlusions in the infrapopliteal arteries.
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of Paclitaxel Eluting Hemodialysis Shunt Balloon Dilatation Catheter (APERTO) compared with the Balloon Dilatation catheter (OHICHO II) for the treatment of Arteriovenous Fistulae Stenosis in patients undergoing hemodialysis.
To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Revolution™ Peripheral Atherectomy System in the treatment of infrainguinal lower extremity peripheral arterial occlusive disease. This Atherectomy system will be used on eligible patients with stenosis of at least 70% diameter reduction to evaluate the change in stenosis after the procedure (effectiveness) and the presence of any major adverse events (safety) for up to 30 days after the procedure.
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is characterized by lower limb arterial obstruction due to atherosclerosis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods can accurately quantify atherosclerotic plaque in the superficial femoral artery (SFA) in patients with PAD. Such techniques have demonstrated plaque regression with statin therapy over 1 year. Alirocumab is a PCSK9 inhibitor that effectively reduces LDL cholesterol up to 70% in patients on statins or intolerant to statins. The investigators hypothesize that effective low density lipoprotein (LDL) lowering with Alirocumab 150m subcutaneously (SQ) every 2 weeks will regress atherosclerotic plaque in the SFA in patients with PAD over one year compared to placebo. 54 patients with mild-moderate PAD (ankle brachial index or ABI 0.4-0.9) will be randomized to alirocumab 150 mg SQ every 2 weeks or matching placebo at the University of Virginia (UVA) (n=34) and Northwestern (n=20). The primary endpoint is change in atherosclerotic plaque volume in the superficial femoral artery over the 1 year treatment period. Secondary endpoints include changes in peak calf muscle perfusion after thigh cuff occlusion/hyperemia, 6-minute walk distance, and blood biomarkers (LDL cholesterol, fibrinogen, high sensitivity c-reactive protein (hs-CRP), and lipoprotein(a).
The research study is designed to assess the technical feasibility and safety of a perivascular injection of vonapanitase delivered via micro-infusion catheter to the distal popliteal, tibial or peroneal arteries immediately following successful angioplasty.
This is a prospective, multi-center, single-arm, non-blinded study designed to investigate the safety and efficacy of the Tack Endovascular System in the Mid/Distal Popliteal, Tibial, and Peroneal Arteries ranging in diameter from 1.5mm to 4.5mm for the treatment of post percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty (PTA) dissection(s) requiring repair.
Induction of autologous angiogenesis in patients with critical limb ischemia using platelet lysate.