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Systemic Inflammatory Response clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Systemic Inflammatory Response.

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NCT ID: NCT05641064 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Aortic Valve Stenosis

Evaluation of Intraoperative Dexmedetomidine Use in Patients Undergoing Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement

Start date: November 22, 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Aim of this randomized prospective study is to investigate the immunomodulatory effects of dexmedetomidine on outcomes in patients with isolated aortic stenosis after surgical aortic valve replacement.

NCT ID: NCT05488249 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

CCTA Coronary Hemodynamics, Systemic Inflammation and Vulnerable Plaques (COHESIVE)

COHESIVE
Start date: August 5, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Although there are numerous studies that have demonstrated the impact of systemic inflammation on coronary plaque vulnerability, there are few literature data regarding the influence of coronary plaque localization within the coronary tree (right and left coronary artery, proximal, mid-coronary and distal), on plaque composition, morphology and degree of vulnerability, in relation with systemic inflammation and coronary hemodynamics. The aim of this study is to identify: (1) the impact of plaque topography in different sites within the coronary tree (right versus left, proximal distal) on their vulnerability degree evaluated with CCTA; (2) the relationship between degree of plaque vulnerability, systemic inflammatory biomarkers and specific hemodynamic characteristics quantified by coronary shear stress computations. The study will include 100 patients with stable coronary artery disease for which data collection will be perform on: (1) Clinical, echocardiographic and ECG data; (2) cardiovascular risk assessment; (3) 128 slice CCTA evaluation of coronary tree anatomy, plaque morphology, composition and vulnerability degree; (4) systemic inflammation based on serum levels of hsCRP, IL-6, MMP-9, periostin, adhesion molecules (5) shear stress via coronary flow computational simulations.