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Recent Myocardial Infarction clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03121911 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Recent Myocardial Infarction

Effects of Interval Physical Training on Expiratory Flow Limitation in Recent Myocardial Infarction

Start date: July 4, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Introduction: Expiratory flow limitation (EFL) and ventilatory inefficiency during dynamic exercise have been identified in patients with recent myocardial infarction (RMI) with preserved ventricular and pulmonary function. However, it is not known what is the prevalence of EFL in this population and what are the effects of physical and respiratory training on this limitation. Objectives: To evaluate the prevalence of EFL and ventilatory inefficiency during dynamic exercise in individuals with uncomplicated RMI, and to evaluate the effects of interval physical training (IT) in addition to inspiratory muscle training (IMT), exclusive IT and absence of cardiopulmonary rehabilitation (CR) on EFL and ventilatory efficiency. Methods: 54 patients will be included, divided into three groups with 18 participants each. All will be submitted to evaluations of heart rate variability, hematological and biochemical profile, erythrocytes membrane deformability and stability, inflammatory markers, respiratory pressures, plethysmography, spirometry, carbon monoxide diffusion capacity, ankle brachial index, electrical bioimpedance, echocardiogram, quality of life questionnaires, cardiopulmonary exercise testing and constant load tests. Then, groups 1 (IT) and group 2 (IT + IMT) will participate in a physical training program for 12 weeks and will be re-evaluated after this period. In addition, they will be monitored for a 6 month period after discharge, with returns every two months to measure the energy expenditure through an accelerometer, and at the end of this period they will repeat all the tests again. Group 3 (absence of CR), will consist of patients who do not live in the city or those who can not participate in the CR program for any other reason, and will only participate in the evaluations.

NCT ID: NCT00893360 Completed - Clinical trials for Ventricular Dysfunction

CArdiosphere-Derived aUtologous Stem CElls to Reverse ventricUlar dySfunction

CADUCEUS
Start date: May 2009
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether giving cardiosphere-derived stem cells (CDCs) to patients with decreased heart function and/or a large amount of damaged muscle after a heart attack is safe. CDCs are cells grown from small biopsy samples taken from the heart. Giving a patient their own CDCs is an investigational procedure that has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for this study. In addition to determining whether this treatment is safe, the study will also examine whether it can decrease the amount of heart muscle damage and/or improve heart function after a heart attack. The amount of heart muscle damage and the function of the heart directly affects prognosis (the predicted course of the disease), and the development of heart failure and other complications some patients experience after a heart attack. By way of background, scientists and physicians believed, until just a few years ago, that heart muscle damaged after a heart attack could not be replaced. Recently, however, scientists discovered that new heart muscle can form, or be regenerated, and that this process can be enhanced (or increased) by the administration of large numbers of certain cells isolated from the heart or bone marrow. These cells can be stem cells, or cells derived from stem cells, and they may achieve their benefit by forming new heart muscle cells, becoming heart muscle cells themselves, or releasing substances which increase the ability of already existing stem cells to form new heart muscle. All of the studies conducted so far have been experimental and no cell type is approved for routine clinical care of patients with heart disease. However, studies involving bone marrow stem cells do indicate some small improvement in heart function and one large study demonstrated a decrease in clinical events in the group which received bone marrow cells. Investigators of this study decided to study CDCs because they come from a person's own body, and therefore have no foreign immune antigens which may be rejected. Since the cells come from the person's heart, they are more likely to form heart tissue. In addition, animal studies indicate no safety problems and that these cells are capable of forming heart muscle and blood vessel cells after heart attacks. The investigators are now studying whether the same is true in humans.