View clinical trials related to Ventricular Premature Complexes.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the performance and safety of using the investigational catheter.
The purpose of this study is to assess the performance and safety for the use of the investigational catheter for intracardiac mapping in the atria and ventricles.
The SWAF study will compare the performance of a smartwatch combined with Cardiologs Platform algorithm in the detection of Atrial Fibrillation and other arrhythmias with that measured on a manually read 12-lead ECG in subjects hospitalized for cardioversion or AF ablation.
The purpose of the present interdisciplinary research program is to develop and evaluate a disease-specific cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) protocol to increase quality of life (QoL) and reduce symptom burden in patients with Premature Ventricular Contractions (PVC).
Objective: investigators investigated the effects of metoprolol tartrate plus Tongmai Yangxin Pill on premature ventricular complexes and cardiac function in patients with premature ventricular complex. Methods: In total, 584 participants with premature ventricular complex will be randomly assigned (at a 1:1 ratio) into two groups: study group (metoprolol tartrate [25 mg twice per day, orally] plus Tongmai Yangxin Pill [40 pills twice per day, orally]) and control group (metoprolol tartrate [25 mg twice per day, orally] plus placebo [40 simulated pills twice per day, orally]). The total treatment period is 8 weeks. Efficacy endpoints and safety assessment: Primary efficacy endpoints are as follows: change in 24-h number of PVCs after treatment and effective rate of 24-h number of PVCs after treatment. Secondary efficacy endpoints are as follows: change in New York Heart Association classification; total effective rate of comprehensive effect; change in high-sensitivity C-reactive protein level; and change in echocardiography parameters (i.e., left ventricular ejection fraction, left ventricular end diastolic dimension, E/A, cardiac index, cardiac output, and stroke volume).
The purpose of this study is to assess the performance and safety for the use of the OPTRELL Catheter for intracardiac mapping in the atria and ventricles.
This research will investigate the PPG signal morphology related to physiological and non- physiological changes in arrhythmia-related heart rate as well as the performance of the PPG-based features previously developed within the framework of the Mini-Holter study to discriminate between several cardiac arrhythmias. To this end, clinical data will be recorded on patients by using a wrist-based PPG monitor simultaneously with 12-lead ECG and intracardiac electrogram (EGM) signals at the university hospital in Lausanne. Importantly, this study will remain purely observational as it will not change the diagnostic and therapeutic management of the included patients, nor will it interfere with the time course of the procedures. The aim of enHEART study is to validate on a larger database the ability of several previously developed PPG-based features to detect a variety of cardiac arrhythmias.
This is a retrospective, multi center clinical study collecting existing, de-identified subject data from medical records to be analyzed using an independent core laboratory to validate performance of a computational ECG mapping system (vMap™).
Retrospective registry will compare subjects who've undergone a mapping and/or ablation procedure for either ischemic ventricular tachycardia or premature ventricular contraction using an epicardial approach with either manual or remote magnetic navigation. Subjects will be compared with regards to safety, efficacy and mortality.
Cardiac resynchronization therapy reduces mortality in patients with systolic heart failure and left bundle branch block. Reduced biventricular pacing can lead to therapy failure. Most effective mortality reduction was seen with a BiV pacing above 98%. Reduced BiV pacing is a common phenomenon with potential impact on CRT-response and pts' prognosis. Frequent ventricular ectopy may be associated with attenuated benefit from CRT. The investigators sought to systematically assess the effect of ventricular arrhythmia treatment on BiV pacing.