Heart Disease Clinical Trials
A listing of Heart Disease medical research trials actively recruiting patient volunteers. Search for closest city to find more detailed information on a research study in your area.
Found 1,769 clinical trials
Influenza Vaccination After Acute Coronary Syndrome
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if influenza vaccination can prevent adverse cardiac events in Chinese acute coronary syndrome patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: Whether influenza vaccination can decrease events of cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke? Whether influenza vaccination can decrease events of …
Evaluation of Efficacy and Safety of Early in Hospital Initiation of Inclisiran Treatment in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes
The purpose of this trial is to learn about the effects of inclisiran in people with serious heart conditions (acute coronary syndromes), when this treatment is started early after hospital admission. To do this, researchers will test the effects of inclisiran compared to placebo, when given with standard treatment.
A Polypill for Acute Coronary Syndrome
The current study aims to investigate whether combining the standard medications prescribed after acute coronary syndrome (ACS)-aspirin, P2Y12 inhibitors, and statins-into a single polypill can improve outcomes following an ACS event. Although these therapies are effective, gaps in adherence and uptake significantly contribute to risk or adverse events in the …
Effectiveness of Interventional Therapy for Non-Flow-Limiting Vulnerable Plaques
The aim of this clinical trial is to explore the optimal preventative treatment strategy for non-flow-limiting vulnerable plaques. The main question it aims to answer is: Can interventional therapy further improve the outcome of non-flow-limiting vulnerable plaques on top of optimal pharmacologic therapy? Researchers will randomly assign patients who meet …
Comparison of Short Versus 12 Months Prasugrel Plus Aspirin in Patients with Acute Coronary Syndromes Treated with Percutaneous Coronary Intervention and Everolimus-eluting Stents
The SORT OUT XII dual antiplatelet treatment (DAPT) duration trial, is a clinical randomized controlled superiority and non-inferiority trial to compare whether prasugrel alone versus prasugrel plus aspirin from month 1 to month 12 after percutaneous coronary intervention with and everolimus-eluting stent in patients with acute coronary syndromes (1) is …
IMPRoving Cardiovascular RiSk Stratification Using T1 Mapping in General populatION
Magnetic properties of myocardial tissue change in the presence of disease. This is detectable in the change of rate of magnetic relaxation, and measurable by T1 and T2 mapping using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). These markers provide novel quantifiable imaging measures for myocardial tissue characterisation. Despite similar principles, the measurements …
RAFT-P&A Randomized Control Trial
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is an irregular heartbeat that can cause symptoms of skipped beats, shortness of breath, stroke, or in some cases fluid in the lungs or legs. Treating AF is mostly to do with slowing the heart rate down so that the heart can get a chance to regain …
Distal Versus Conventional Transradial Artery Access for Coronary Catheterization in Patients With STEMI
Recently, a novel distal transradial, through anatomical snuffbox, approach has been proposed for undertaking percutaneous coronary angiography and interventions. The existing literature has evaluated distal transradial access (dTRA) as a feasible and safe approach, with faster hemostasis, lower rates of periprocedural complications and reduced incidence of radial artery occlusion (RAO). …
Expanded Study of the HighLife 28mm Trans-septal Trans-catheter Mitral Valve in Patients With Moderate-severe or Severe Mitral Regurgitation and at High Surgical Risk
to evaluate the safety and performance of the HighLife 28mm transcatheter, trans-septal Mitral Valve in patients with moderate-severe or severe mitral regurgitation who are at high risk for surgical treatment.
The Early Valve Replacement in Severe ASYmptomatic Aortic Stenosis Study
Aortic stenosis (AS) affects approximately 5% of individuals >65 years old, with ~3% of people >75 years having moderate to severe disease. The prevalence of AS is rising rapidly due to an ageing population and is projected to double in the next two decades. Increasingly clinicians face the dilemma of …