View clinical trials related to Peripheral Arterial Disease.
Filter by:- Prospective, multi-center single-arm observational study - A total of 100 subjects with femoropopliteal artery disease who meet all inclusion and exclusion criteria will be included. - Patients will be followed clinically for 12 months after the procedure. - An imaging study (duplex ultrasound, CT or catheter-based angiography) follow-up according to participating hospital's protocol will be performed at 12 months. - Ankle-brachial index, symptom status and presence of stent fracture will be evaluated at 12 months.
This study looks to examine whether an online patient tool to monitor factors affecting patients peripheral artery disease can lead to improvements in patients' disease and slow its progression.
In this project, the investigators propose to use high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure blood perfusion in different groups of calf muscle. This imaging approach is standard of care for evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD), and has never been successfully applied to PAD. Preliminary results show distinct patterns of muscle perfusion between healthy and PAD patients, and thus great promise of the technique. The investigators will first verify the reproducibility of the technique, and then compare the calf muscle perfusion measures in PAD patients against healthy age-matched controls. This comparison will test the feasibility of detecting functional abnormality in PAD patients. After the baseline scans, the PAD patients will opt to undergo a 12-week supervised exercise therapy, and then a post-therapy MRI scan. Comparison of the pre- and post-therapy measurements will indicate how the therapy improves the calf-muscle perfusion, and how this perfusion change correlates with increases in patient's walking ability. The long term goals of this project are to develop an improved diagnostic test for patients with PAD to predict who will benefit from therapeutic intervention. The MRI perfusion studies of calf muscle can be performed in conjunction with routine peripheral MR angiography to assess the functional significance of vascular stenosis.
This study will evaluate the effectiveness and safety of directional atherectomy plus local drug delivery using balloon catheter system in the treatment of femoropopliteal occlusive disease. Patients of femoropopliteal occlusive disease will randomly receive directional atherectomy plus local drug delivery using balloon catheter system and dilation using drug-coated balloon. Their clinical outcomes (e.g. 12-month late lumen loss rate, 1-year patency rate of target vessel) in 1 year after the treatment will be compared.
Peripheral arterial disease affects around 25% of the UK population aged over 55. Left untreated it can lead to debilitating pain, gangrene, amputation and death. It most commonly affects the lower limbs and in the earlier stages of the disease patients can present with a symptom known as intermittent claudication; pain felt in the legs which stops the patient from walking past a certain distance. Current National Institute for Healthcare and Excellence (NICE) guidelines recommend Supervised Exercise as first line treatment for patients with peripheral arterial disease presenting with intermittent claudication. Supervised exercise employs behaviour changing techniques which enable the patient to modify their lifestyles, improving their claudication symptoms, quality of life and reducing their cardiovascular risk. Despite this treatment being significantly more cost-effective than often employed complex endovascular management, most institutions don't offer such programmes citing lack of resources and compliance from clinicians and patients alike. The investigators propose a more cost-effective, resource-savvy solution in the form of REmotely SuPervised ExerCise Training (RESPECT). This allows the patient to exercise in the convenience of their own home, at a time of their choosing but still be supervised via fitness tracker technology and an online fitness platform. This randomised controlled trial will attempt to prove its' effectiveness in increasing claudication distance, improving functional ability, decreasing cardiovascular risk and improving quality of life whilst being more cost-effective than the currently recognised national first line treatment. This trial has the potential to revolutionise the management of patients with peripheral arterial disease.
The primary objective of this trial is to investigate whether intramuscular administration of allogeneic mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) is safe and potentially effective, assessed as a composite outcome of mortality, limb status, clinical status (Rutherford classification) and pain score (visual analogue scale), in patients with no-option severe limb ischemia (SLI). The investigators will conduct a double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial to investigate the effect of allogeneic bone marrow(BM)-derived MSC in patients with SLI, who are not eligible for conventional surgical or endovascular therapies. The investigators intend to include 60 patients, who will be randomized to undergo 30 intramuscular injections with either BM-MSC (30 injection sites with 5*10^6 MSCs each) or placebo in the lower leg of the ischemic extremity. Primary outcome i.e. therapy success, a composite outcome considering mortality, limb status, clinical status (Rutherford classification) and changes in pain score, will be assessed at six months.
A Phase I/IIa Dose-Escalation Study Evaluating the Safety, Tolerability and Efficacy of Rejuveinix in Combination With Standard Interventional Therapy for Critical Limb Ischemia Patients with Rutherford Class 4, 5 and 6 Disease
The intent of this clinical study is to evaluate the safety of the injection composed of autologous bone marrow derived endothelial cells (BM-ECs) and platelet-rich plasma extract (PRPE) for the treatment of critical limb ischemia.
Absorbable sutures are not generally accepted by the majority of vascular surgeons for the possible complications such as the breakage of the suture at the anastomoses level. Some experimental and clinical studies in the current literature demonstrated that the use of absorbable sutures may even reduce some important complications such as restenosis. The aim of this study is to compare absorbable and non-absorbable sutures in patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery with vein bypass grafting.
Reduced nitric oxide (NO) availability is a hallmark of a number of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) including peripheral artery disease (PAD). The investigators will test the hypothesis that sub-chronic NEO40™ supplementation will improve vascular NO function and improve intermittent claudication in patients with PAD. Using a prospective, double blind, placebo controlled experimental design in 30 patients, graded treadmill tests will be performed at baseline and after 3 months after randomization, according to the Skinner-Gardner protocol. Initial claudication distance (ICD) and absolute claudication distance (ACD) will be recorded. Two consecutive treadmill tests will be performed within 1 week at baseline (before administration of study drug); and 2 test will be performed at 3 months. Functional status will also be assessed by the Walking Impairment Questionnaire and the Health Status Survey SF-36 questionnaire (SF-36). Vascular function will be assessed with the use of a Vendys® vascular reactivity (endothelial function) test (Endothelix Inc). Digital pulse amplitude will be assessed using sensor probes on the index finger during reactive hyperemia. Blood will be collected for measurement (by Neogenis) of plasma levels of nitrite and nitrate at baseline and at the completion of the study. Based on previously published trials using this NO technology, the investigators predict that the group receiving the active supplement will exhibit an improvement in claudication distance and all measures of vascular function after 3 months.