View clinical trials related to Peripheral Vascular Diseases.
Filter by:Stem cell therapy has been a new and effective therapy in recent years for diabetic foot.This study intends to establish an optimal clinical research program, and attempts to break the technical bottleneck in the stem cell therapy for treating diabetes related vascular complications.
Stem cell therapy has been a new and effective therapy in recent years for diabetic foot.This study intends to establish an optimal clinical research program, and attempts to break the technical bottleneck in the stem cell therapy for treating diabetes related vascular complications.
Investigators conduct a monocentric pilot study with the objective to determine the hemodynamic parameter of fluorescence angiography (slope, amplitude, saturation time ) best correlated with toe pressure in patients with suspicion of critical limb ischemia.
Investigators hypothesize in patients presenting with significant peripheral arterial disease with clinical indications for treatment with angioplasty, there will be a difference in 12 month patency between the subjects with Lutonix 035 Drug coated Balloon PTA Catheter and IN.PACT Admiral Paclitaxel-Coated PTA Balloon Catheter.
Evaluate the feasibility of an autologous cell preparation composed of a mixture of cells enriched for endothelial progenitor cells (EnEPCs) and multipotent adult hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) (BGC101), in the treatment of patients suffering from peripheral arterial disease (PAD) with critical limb ischemia (CLI) who have not responded to optimal pharmacological treatment or control of risk factors and/or had a revascularization failure, and do not have the option of further revascularization treatment.
Stem cell therapy has been a new and effective therapy in recent years for diabetic foot.This study intends to establish an optimal clinical research program, and attempts to break the technical bottleneck in the stem cell therapy for treating diabetes related vascular complications.
This study will use SPECT/CT imaging to assess the effect of percutaneous revascularization treatments in patients with Peripheral arterial disease and diabetes mellitus, in whom the disease can progress more quickly than in patients without diabetes.
To compare the safety and effectiveness of dual anti-platelet therapy with cilostazol 100 mg twice daily and aspirin 100 mg daily versus monotherapy with aspirin 100 mg daily in patients undergoing peripheral angioplasty or stenting or both for the management of peripheral arterial disease.
1. Study design: multicenter retrospective and prospective observational study 2. Study Cohort : 1. Retrospective cohort: This cohort retrospectively enrolls patients with lower extremity artery disease who underwent endovascular treatment from January 2006 to the date of approval by IRB in the participating hospitals. Informed consent was waived by IRB. 2. Prospective cohort: This cohort prospectively enrolls patients with lower extremity artery disease who undergo endovascular treatment from the date of approval by IRB to July, 2018 in the participating hospitals. Informed consent will be obtained prior to enrollment. 3. Baseline clinical and lesion characteristics, procedural and post-procedural data, clinical outcomes, hemodynamic, and imaging follow-up data are investigated. Primary patency and target lesion revascularization rates of the total cohort and patient subgroups are evaluated. Risk factors of restenosis and target lesion revascularization are determined.
The Peripheral Arterial Disease prevalence is around 3-10 % of the world population. Exercise plays an important role in treating these patients.