View clinical trials related to Peripheral Arterial Disease.
Filter by:Over the past decade, interventional endovascular treatment, whenever feasible, has become the first line management in the treatment of lower extremity arterial disease (LEAD) for many indications. Growth of endovascular therapy was based on shorter hospital length of stay and lower complications rates. This minimally invasive procedure allows the revascularization of the lower limbs under fluoroscopy guidance, with injection of iodinated contrast allowing to analyze the arteries. However, many of these patients present renal insufficiency which could be worsened due to the iodinated contrast injections during the endovascular procedure for LEAD. Consequently, the vascular interventionalist should find a way to achieve patient revascularization while minimizing iodinated contrast injections in order to maintain the renal function. The aim of this study is to compare the amount of iodine contrast used during LEAD endovascular revascularization with and without the Innova Breeze® and blended roadmap software.
The purpose of his study is to collect short term and long term clinical evaluation data of the Passeo-18 Lux Paclitaxel releasing balloon catheter, subject to patients who visit hospital from arteriosclerosis in the infrainguinal arteries in actual clinical environment. Research institute for enrollment, and period; It is planned to enroll about 200 subjects in 9 domestic research institutes. It is expected to require about 12-18 months to enroll the subjects. Subject follow-up schedule; Perform follow-up by phone call or clinical assessment at 1, 6, 12, and 24 months of the postoperative time point
The purpose of this study is to understand how a Best Practice Advisory (BPA) for high-intensity statin therapy in patients with Peripheral Artery Disease impacts prescription rates.
The study objective is to assess the ability to define and measure post treatment recoil in infrapopliteal arteries. Preliminary evidence as to the differences between serration angioplasty and standard balloon angioplasty as defined by post treatment recoil, lumen gain, and dissection will be collected.
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) caused by atherosclerosis causes damage to the arteries originating in the aorta (descending) from the iliacs to the extremities of the lower limbs. It causes significant morbidity and mortality. Percutaneous revascularization plays a key role in the management of these patients. Many percutaneous treatment options have been developed: arteriectomy, naked stents, active balloons and active stents. Of these, only paclitaxel-active stents were successful in reducing the rates of restenosis and reoperation in patients with superficial femoral artery injury.The main objective is to study symptomatic improvement at 1 year of patients treated with revascularization of the lower limbs.
All evaluable subjects will receive VibratoSleeve therapeutic ultrasound (TUS) treatments. The device will be programmed to deliver TUS at a pre-determined level. Three different acoustic intensity levels will be tested during the first three treatment visits (one at each visit day). The most effective treatment that is comfortable to a subject will be prescribed for the remaining treatment sessions. Treatment time will be 90 minutes per session, one session per day. Thirty treatment sessions will be performed over a 45-day period. Subjects will appear for on-site follow-up visits at 1-, 3-, and 6-months following subject's last (30th) treatment session.
The cardiovascular risk of women has been the subject of particular interest in recent years, in the world, in particular under the impetus of Cardiology companies, with more and more work focusing on the specificities of these diseases in women as well as differences in terms of management and prognosis with a literature mainly based on American data and which focuses particularly on ischemic heart disease. The expected results are to have a prevalence of PAOD in an Alsatian cohort, most of the data we currently have from American data, with analysis of the impact of specific and non-specific risk factors in this cohort and their weight in PAOD.
Recent clinical trial results demonstrate that IVL can increase lumen area by emitting sonic pressure waves, with less inflation pressure as compared to traditional angioplasty balloon dilation and resulting in minimal trauma to the vessel. Therefore, the use of IVL prior to placement of a stent for severely calcified femoral popliteal arteries may be associated with more successful stent implants and better long-term patency, resulting in a decrease in cardiovascular events. The investigator will evaluate the success by defining as lesion stenosis less than 30% and no evidence of Major Adverse Cardiac Event including death or any amputation of the index limb within 30 days of the procedure.
The primary goal of the study is to obtain effect size data on the use of Shockwave Intravascular Lithotripsy (IVL) technology in calcified common femoral lesions in patients with peripheral artery disease for a series of endpoints, including target lesion revascularization and health status, to enable future planning of comparative effectiveness research.
This study is evaluating whether a therapeutic ultrasound device can improve blood flow to the leg with diabetic foot ulcer (DFU).