View clinical trials related to Tachycardia.
Filter by:The main purpose of this clinical study is to collect electrograms from an investigational lead placed in an extravascular space, for development of a future Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD) system.
This study will evaluate the feasibility of visualization and characterization of arrhythmia ablation lesions by MRI immediately following standard ablation techniques. The appearance of the ablation lesion will be correlated with clinical outcomes and risk of arrhythmia recurrence.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects that electromagnetic field exposure from using a tablet and smart phone have on a leadless pacemaker (MICRA device).
Supraventricular tachycardia ablations of the Conformité Européenne (CE)-certified (since 2013) CartoUnivuTM module (Biosense Webster, Diamond Bar, USA) allows a seamless combination of a fluoro image and Carto® 3 System maps into a single view. This helps to reduce fluoroscopy levels and reduce exposure time for physicians, staff and patients to as low as reasonably achievable. The UnivuTM technology will be compared in a randomized manner to the conventional radiofrequency Ablation.
Investigate the value of unipolar and bipolar electrograms (EGM) for predicting the successful ablation site for idiopathic outflow tract ventricular arrhythmia (OTVA).
The purpose of this study is to learn if taking a drug called direct oral anticoagulant after an ablation procedure keeps blood clots from forming and lowers the chance of having a stroke in patients with ventricular tachycardia or arrhythmia (VT).
The objective of this clinical investigation is to evaluate: 1. the safety and efficacy of the CyberHeart System, CardioPlan™ Software and Laptop, in treating patients with refractory ventricular tachycardia (VT) using the CyberKnife® Radiosurgical System. 2. The CyberHeart System performance with respect to the ability to contour myocardial targets that are transferred to the Multi-plan® Treatment Planning Software of the CyberKnife® system for the production and delivery of a safe radiosurgical treatment plan. Cardiac radiosurgery is a minimally-non invasive, painless, procedure. Tissue ablation can be accomplished precisely.
In this clinical investigation, the safety, feasibility and performance of the novel EnSite™ HD Grid Catheter mapping system for advanced high-density three-dimensional mapping will be studied in patients undergoing catheter ablation procedures for the treatment of non-paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) or left atrial tachycardia (AT).
The Fetal Atrial Flutter and Supraventricular Tachycardia (FAST) Therapy Trial is a prospective multi-center trial that examines the efficacy and safety of standard prenatal antiarrhythmic treatment. Study components of FAST include three prospective sub-studies to determine the efficacy and safety of commonly used transplacental drug regimens in suppressing fetal AF without hydrops (Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) A), SVT without hydrops (RCT B), and SVT with hydrops (RCT C). All RCTs are open label phase III trials of standard 1st line therapy, which either is started as monotherapy (no hydrops) or as dual therapy (hydrops).
The primary objective of this study is to investigate the influence of a standardized noxious stimulus on the ANI, SPI and hemodynamic parameters during standard propofol and sufentanil TCI and to see if the ANI and SPI are predictive of a hemodynamic reaction. In addition the investigators compare the performance of ANI and SPI against one another as well as investigate if ANI or SPI can be used to find the ideal CeSUF for a given patient.