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Showing 1-13 of 13 trials
NCT05268094
COMPASS is a prospective multicenter randomized interventional trial. Participants with ductal-dependent pulmonary blood flow will be randomized to receive either a systemic-to-pulmonary artery shunt or ductal artery stent. Block randomization will be performed by center and by single vs. two ventricle status. Participants will be followed through the first year of life.
NCT03229538
This study's objective is to determine the pharmacokinetics (PK)/pharmacodynamics (PD), safety and efficacy of methylprednisolone in infants undergoing heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. This is a prospective, double blind, multi-center, placebo-controlled safety and efficacy study. Blood samples will be collected from a subset of enrolled study participants to evaluate multiple dose methylprednisolone PK/PD. Participants will be randomized in a 1:1 fashion to intravenous methylprednisolone versus placebo. Study drug/placebo will be administered 8 to 12 hours before the anticipated start time of surgery and in the operating room at the time of initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass. Patients will be followed for primary and secondary outcomes for the duration of their hospitalization. Serious study drug-related adverse events will be collected for 7 days after the last dose of study drug.
NCT07029230
Patients younger than 18 scheduled for congenital heart surgery will be assessed during and post-operatively as well as at the first follow-up after 9-12 month for the novel biomarker sST2. We will assess the marker independently and in evaluation with other blood biomarkers to evaluate sings of heart failure. Compared to established biomarkers, sST2 promises thereby to be less variable to factors like age or acute kidney injury, rendering it potentially more reliable in the field of congenital cardiac surgery.
NCT06431269
Feasibility and efficiency of Screening for Neurodevelopmental Disorders by an Advanced Practice Nurse in Children aged 1 to 5 with Congenital Heart Disease
NCT05910320
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of the use of an investigational wearable vital sign monitoring device in infants.
NCT06015191
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of video conferencing for the delivery of live-supervised, real-time cardiac rehabilitation (CR) exercise training to groups of adolescents with congenital heart disease (CHD) in their homes. Participants will be randomized to either the remote cardiac rehab (RCR) group or active control group. The RCR group will participate in live, group-based exercise training (3-5 participants per exercise session), in their homes 3 days per week for 45 minutes over 12-weeks. Exercise sessions will be led and supervised by a live health coach via telehealth video technology. The active control group will be provided informational handouts on health exercise for their cardiac diagnosis. The primary aim is to compare between group changes (0-12-weeks) in cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2peak). Secondary aims are to compare between group changes (0-12-weeks) in cardiac function (echocardiography), lean body mass, and physical frailty. Exploratory aims will compare between group changes (0-12-weeks) in physical function, quality of life, skeletal muscle function, and physical activity self-efficacy. Additionally, exploratory aims will explore the impact of demographic characteristics, program participation, program satisfaction, and daily physical activity on changes in cardiorespiratory fitness.
NCT06912412
This study is to develop a 12-week community-based remote cardiac rehabilitation program for pediatric patients with complex congenital heart disease and to assess its validity and safety. For these children, a multidisciplinary approach including pediatric rehabilitation medicine, pediatric thoracic surgery, pediatrics, pediatric psychiatry, sports science, and nutrition is essential, but such comprehensive services are rarely available in Korea. As a result, pediatric cardiac rehabilitation at the community level is nearly nonexistent. Recent long-term retrospective cohort studies suggest that maintaining regular physical activity and aerobic capacity from early childhood significantly reduces future cardiovascular complications, emphasizing the importance of early pediatric cardiac rehabilitation. However, participation in existing programs is low due to limited accessibility. The investigators hypothesize that a community-based remote cardiac rehabilitation program for these patients is both valid and safe. Participants will be children aged 8-18 years diagnosed with complex congenital heart disease , at least 3 months post-surgery, and stable cardiovascular status. Interventions include supervised and self-directed cardiac rehabilitation exercises. Monitoring (heart rate, SpO2, ECG) will be performed in real-time, with non-real-time data collection of physical activity using smartwatches. The intervention lasts 12 weeks with a 12-week follow-up. Validity measures include baseline evaluation, adherence, dropout rate, participant and parent satisfaction, and changes in cardiopulmonary exercise capacity, physical activity, body composition, fitness (6-minute walk, strength, flexibility, respiratory muscle strength), and questionnaires (physical activity, quality of life, exercise satisfaction, depression, psychological state). Safety will be assessed by monitoring adverse events, vital signs, fatigue (Borg scale), and pain before and after exercise.
NCT05647161
Congenital heart disease occurs in about 1% of live births and can range from (1) naturally curable conditions that require no treatment to (2) conditions that require multiple immediate operations or refractory severe conditions. In the course of a staged surgical intervention, adhesion formation around the heart and large vessels can occur, and dissection of the adhesion site is required at the time of reoperation. There is a concern that dissection may markedly increase the risk of operation such as prolonged surgical time, cardiovascular injury, and increased blood loss, and medical devices to prevent adhesion formation after operation in the field of pediatric cardiovascular operation are strongly desired in medical settings. The investigational product (BAX602), which has already been manufactured and marketed by Baxter overseas, has been used for open heart surgery as a local hemostatic agent without biological materials in Europe and the US for more than 20 years. However, since it has not been approved in Japan, this randomized controlled study will be conducted in Japan to demonstrate the effect of BAX602 to prevent and reduce adhesion formation between the surface of the heart/large vessels and surrounding tissues in pediatric patients undergoing planned multistage operation for congenital heart disease.
NCT04217421
Neurodevelopmental impairment due to delayed brain development and brain injury is a fundamental problem in children with critical congenital heart disease (CCHD). Significant longterm motor-, cognitive-, and behavioral problems are the result of early postnatally and perioperatively induced brain injury. Allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, prevents the formation of toxic free oxygen radicals, thereby limiting hypoxia-reperfusion damage. Both animal and neonatal studies suggest that administration of allopurinol reduces hypoxic-ischemic brain injury, is cardioprotective, and safe. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of allopurinol administered early postnatally and perioperatively in children with a CCHD requiring cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.
NCT05546983
Congenital heart disease is a common abnormality in newborns. The marked improvement in the surgical management of congenital heart disease has led to a reduction in postoperative mortality, historically a quality criterion for surgical and resuscitation management. With the improvement of medical knowledge and surgical techniques, mortality is no longer a single quality criterion for a center and the search for other quality criteria is essential.
NCT05826769
Congenital heart disease (CHD) is a public health problem, A substantial percentage of infants and toddlers with CHD undergo cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. Undernutrition affects up to 90% of these patients, and it's contributed to worse surgical and neurological outcomes. Infants with CHD are typically delivered at full term with a normal birth weight. However, as time passes, their development may become stunted. There are no negotiated guidelines for nutritional monitoring and intervention in this age bracket of infants. Through the use of Energy Enriched and Protein Enriched nutrition formula during the postoperative phase, this has shown to be well tolerated and support in delivering higher nutrition intakes within the first days after surgery. The objective of this research is to assess the long term outcome of patients who have had energy- and protein-rich nutrition formulas post cardiac surgery. An open, 2-arm, randomized controlled trials will be conducted to assess the efficacy of early administration of energy enriched and protein enriched formula in post cardiac repair infants. The expected primary outcome is that intervention group will have good tolerance to feeding and the secondary outcome is the significant weight gain rate (weight velocity) in comparing to control groups
NCT05778240
The goal of this clinical trial is to analyze implications of two alternative nudge-interventions to increase adherence to palivizumab prophylaxis in children with congenital heart disease. The main questions investigators aim to answer are: * Are well-established cognitive biases effective in increasing patient families' adherence to the palivizumab prophylaxis program? * What are the factors that affect families' adherence to the prophylaxis program and whether and how the effects of interventions depend on these factors? To study these questions investigators planned to utilize four well-established cognitive biases in designing two alternative nudge-interventions and investigators measured the effectiveness of each nudge-intervention against a control group. Patients were randomly allocated to one control and two treatment groups. In the control group, investigators informed participants about the prophylaxis program and provided a schedule. Patients in the first treatment group were additionally called two days before appointments (status quo bias), and were asked to plan the appointment day (implementation intention). Patients in the second treatment group received biweekly messages informing them about the benefits of the program as well as the current adherence rate (availability bias and social norm).
NCT05142046
The intraoperative fluid balance during pediatric cardiac surgery is a very sensitive parameter given the low circulating volume and the complexity of anesthetic management but might be deleterious if inadequately managed. The hypothesis is that a highly positive intraoperative fluid balance increases the incidence of adverse events in the short and long term. A retrospective observational study including all consecutive children admitted for cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) from 2008 to 2018 in a tertiary children's hospital will be performed. A multivariate analysis will be carried out to study the effect of the fluid balance on the incidence of adverse events.