View clinical trials related to Tricuspid Regurgitation.
Filter by:The present study evaluates patients after interventional therapy of valvular diseases of the right heart. Follow-up examinations include medical history taking, laboratory measurements and an echo. The aim is to assess the different interventional therapies and their impact on patient's outcome.
The present study includes patients with tricuspid regurgitation and heart failure diagnosed with echocardiography. The aim is to evaluate the physical performance of patients with tricuspid regurgitation and heart failure, to observe the course of the diseases and to allow a better understanding of new therapy options.
Tricuspid regurgitation (TR), which in close to 90% of cases is functional as a consequence of left-sided heart failure, left heart valve abnormalities or pulmonary (vascular) disease, is associated with adverse patient outcomes . Due to the increased risk of surgical tricuspid valve repair or replacement compared to surgery in left-sided valve disease TR is often undertreated. Treatment options for the tricuspid valve have so far been limited. Conservative therapy over longer. periods usually results in refractoriness to diuretic treatment. Surgical therapy is associated with a high rate of in-hospital mortality (8.8%), the cause of which is not yet fully understood but may partly be explained by the hemodynamic challenge that cardiopulmonary bypass imposes on the often already-dysfunctional right ventricle. Recently, transcatheter strategies have been developed and have shown promising results. Despite the promising data it has so far not be determined objectively whether interventional treatment of isolated tricuspid regurgitation improves exercise capacity and what role right ventricular function plays in this setting.
The objective of this early feasibility study is to gain early clinical insight into the performance of the Intrepid transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement (TTVR) system intended for transfemoral access to deliver a self-expanding bioprosthetic valve within the tricuspid valve.
The Eko CORE and DUO stethoscopes are FDA-approved electronic devices that have the capacity to record heart sounds. The study seeks to expand murmur detection to include VHD classification through the development of novel ML algorithms that are able to distinguish between systolic vs. diastolic vs. continuous murmurs, as well as classify VHD type and severity, using 4-point auscultation with Eko CORE and DUO electronic stethoscopes to record heart sounds.
Functional tricuspid regurgitation (TR) has been regarded as a secondary phenomenon of heart failure (HF), mitral valve (MV) disease or atrial fibrillation. Regardless of left ventricular (LV) function or pulmonary artery pressure, presence of moderate or greater functional TR is associated with poor prognosis. When a patient develops functional TR, it causes RV dilation and tricuspid annular enlargement, which also lead to deterioration of TR. A vicious cycle of significant TR, RV volume overload, tricuspid annular dilation and consequent aggravation of TR is accepted as a main determinant of the poor clinical outcome of patients with TR. Therefore, therapies that induce reverse remodeling of the RV and consequently reduce TR, may improve clinical outcomes. However, there have been no proven medical therapies for TR. The investigators hypothesize that carvedilol or empagliflozin is effective on improving RV remodeling in patients with functional severe TR and try to examine this hypothesis in a multicenter, 2x2 factorial, and randomized comparison study using cardiac MRI.
Late tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is a common complication after left-sided valve surgery (LSVS), which usually progresses slowly and results in right heart failure at terminal stage. Over the past 3 decades, with the advances in minimally invasive surgical techniques, operative mortality after reoperation for severe TR has significantly decreased from 30% to 3-8%, leading to a gradual shift from medical therapy alone to surgery in those patients. However, there has been no consensus on the clinical benefit of minimally invasive tricuspid surgery over medical therapy for severe TR after LSVS.
A prospective, single-arm, multi-center first-in-human (FIH) study to evaluate the safety and performance of the Innoventric Trilliumâ„¢ Stent Graft System. Twenty (20) patients in 8 investigational sites will be enrolled. All enrolled study patients will be assessed at baseline, during the procedure, at discharge, after 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, 1.5 years, 2 years, and 3 years following the index procedure.
This study is to evaluate the safety and technical performance of the Cardiovalve Transfemoral System for tricuspid valve replacement. Data collected in the clinical study will include 30-day safety and performance of the device and delivery system, and long-term clinical outcomes over a follow-up of 5 years.
To establish the safety and effectiveness of the Edwards PASCAL Transcatheter Repair System in patients with symptomatic severe tricuspid regurgitation who have been determined to be at an intermediate or greater estimated risk of mortality with tricuspid valve surgery by the cardiac surgeon with concurrence by the local Heart Team