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Showing 1-8 of 8 trials
NCT06953206
Evaluation of clinical outcomes and valve performance of the SAPIEN 3 Ultra Resilia (S3UR) valve over 10 years.
NCT07365345
Within 30 minutes before anesthesia, acupoint electrical stimulation at different frequencies were applied at Neiguan, Jian Shi, and Baihui. The changes in blood pressure during the anesthesia induction period were compared between the high-frequency group and the low-frequency group.
NCT07314476
The study aims to investigate characteristics and prognosis of ischemic stroke cases following cardiological interventions, focusing on the effectiveness and safety of acute ischemic stroke treatments.
NCT07267117
The objective of this study is to evaluate and predict the progression of moderate cardiac valve stenosis and regurgitation using clinical, biological, echocardiographic, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data. Additionally, the study aims to analyze the potential impact of device-based interventions, pharmacological therapy, and lifestyle modifications on disease progression.
NCT07148973
The present study was designed to evaluate the safety of TAVR with a preoperative ascending aortic (AA) diameter ≥ 40 mm. This study also aimed to explore the procedural outcomes and clinical prognoses of patients with AAD combined compared to those of patients without AAD combined who underwent TAVR. Between January 2019 and July 2021, a total of 186 patients who were diagnosed at a single centre with severe AS underwent the TAVR procedure using a self-expanding valve. The AA diameter was evaluated via 3-dimensional (3D) multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) before TAVR. AAD was defined as a value of AAD ≥ 40 mm.
NCT07045233
After more than a decade of development, transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is now a standard, guideline-recommended treatment for all symptomatic patients with severe aortic stenosis, regardless of their surgical risk. However, stroke remains a risk for these patients after TAVR. Given its severe impact-significantly increasing post-procedure mortality and severely affecting quality of life-preventing TAVR-related stroke is an urgent problem we need to solve. The Sentinel Cerebral Protection Device is a percutaneous dual-filter brain protection system. During the procedure, the Sentinel device's filters capture blood clots and tissue debris. After the operation, the captured clots and debris are removed from the body along with the device. Its safety and effectiveness have been validated. Therefore, this project plans to conduct a multi-center registry clinical study to: Develop a widespread neurological risk prediction model. Create a strict, standardized prevention protocol. Boost awareness of perioperative stroke prevention during TAVR. Provide practical clinical experience. By doing so, we aim to better prevent strokes in patients undergoing TAVR.
NCT04952909
A Prospective, Multicenter, Non-Randomized, Single-Arm, Open-Label Clinical Study to Demonstrate the Safety and Effectiveness of the ShortCut™ device for splitting bioprosthetic aortic valve leaflets in patients who are presented for a valve-in-valve (ViV) transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedure for an approved ViV indication, and who are at risk for TAVR-induced coronary artery ostium obstruction.
NCT05283356
The optimal pharmacological therapy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) to prevent valve thrombosis and reduce thromboembolic complications without significantly increasing the risk of bleeding is not yet fully defined and constitutes an important unmet clinical need. Recently, single antiplatelet therapy (SAPT) with Aspirin has been increasingly adopted to avoid bleeding early after TAVI compared with dual antiplatelet therapy. However, TAVI population is affected by a diversity of chronic pathologies that increase the risk of post-TAVI ischemic complications. Stroke is prevalent, especially peri- and early post-TAVI (\<1-8% in the 1st year). Although peri-TAVI myocardial infarction (MI) is rare (1-3%), concomitant coronary artery disease (CAD), diabetes mellitus (DM), and peripheral vascular disease (PVD), is very frequent in the TAVI population, affecting around 30-70% of patients. In patients with CAD, the need to re-access the coronary arteries after TAVI is challenging and can be hampered by the trancatheter valve struts. This is critical in TAVI patients with an acute coronary syndrome and in younger patients with long-life expectancy after TAVI. The use of a P2Y12 inhibitor provides significant ischemic protection in the in the coronary, cerebral and peripheral vascular territories compare to Aspirin. The use of a P2Y12 inhibitor as antiplatelet treatment can decrease the need for new coronary revascularizations and reduce the incidence of thromboembolic complications after TAVI.