View clinical trials related to Pulmonary Valve Stenosis.
Filter by:Postoperative stenoses of the pulmonary artery vascular system seldom occur alone; they are frequently found in connection with congenital heart defects or malformation syndromes. The resulting increase of afterload represents a serious pressure load for the right ventricle. Depending on the number and severity of the stenoses, gradual functional right ventricular failure is to be expected. Due to limited clinical experience, there has not yet been a consensus concerning the indications for the different therapeutic strategies (balloon dilatation, stent implantation, surgical dilatation techniques). Up to now, only few investigators in few centres use stents as therapy. Therefore, systematic multicenter investigations assessing larger groups of patients undergoing this procedure are not yet available. The same applies to other novel dilatation techniques, such as the use of the "cutting balloon" as therapy for rigid valve stenoses. By comparing and analysing different invasive forms of treatment (balloon dilatation, stent implantation and surgery), we expect to achieve an optimisation of therapy. In the study, the outcomes of different strategies as practiced now in German cardiological centers will be compared and the main factors influencing the results will be determined. On the basis of a standardized investigation before and one year after the intervention, these comparisons with respect to the reduction of stenosis and corresponding changes of right ventricular functional and anatomical changes are carried out correcting for known confounders. The assessment of the different included invasive and non-invasive diagnostical procedures with respect to their ability to detect pathological findings and their changes as result of the treatment is an important secondary target of the study.
To create a registry of all Oregon children undergoing surgical repair of congenital heart disease since 1958 in order to determine mortality, morbidity, and disability after surgery and to assess the safety of pregnancy in women with corrected congenital heart disease and the risk of prematurity and occurrence of congenital heart defects in offspring.
OBJECTIVES: I. Identify latent hypoparathyroidism in normocalcemic adult survivors with repaired conotruncal cardiac defects, by evaluating parathyroid gland secretory function after induced hypocalcemia. II. Determine the relationship of parathyroid hormone secretion to microdeletions in the same region of chromosome 22q11 as found in patients with DiGeorge anomaly.