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Transcoronary Pacing and Myocardial Viability

T

The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Cardiac Pacing, Artificial

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04258228
CD19/124706

Details and patient eligibility

About

Narrowing of the coronary arteries can cause chest pain and weaken the heart. In patients who have had heart attacks, blocked or severely narrowed arteries should be investigated (with coronary artery x-rays, or angiography) with efforts undertaken to improve the blood flow (angioplasty and stenting or heart bypass surgery). Sometimes these arteries are in fact supplying heart tissue which is already dead. Procedures to open up these vessels will therefore not influence how the patient feels or their future prognosis. On occasion, in order to determine whether heart tissue is alive (viable) and likely to benefit from of such efforts, a further investigation is required before another attempt is undertaken to open up these diseased arteries. This will require imaging of the heart to assess the state of the tissue (for example with magnetic resonance imaging, or cardiac MRI which is the gold standard). This means that patients may require two invasive procedures. One way around this would be to assess the electrical properties of the heart muscle in question during a single procedure. The principle is simply that dead muscle will have no electrical activity. Assessing the electrical properties of the heart through the coronary arteries using the same equipment used to treat the diseased artery during initial coronary angiography may provide viability information instantly, thus allowing treatment to proceed at the same procedure. In order to investigate whether this approach has promise, we will be performing a cardiac MRI around the time that patients have their coronary angioplasty. The electrical data will be compared to the cardiac MRI results to determine if this technique can be used in clinical practice. This innovative work has potential clinical and financial benefits.

Furthermore, patients can be diagnosed and treated during one procedure

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 99 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

    1. Out Patients over 18 years who have been listed for electively for percutaneous coronary intervention.
  1. In Patients who have been admitted with an acute coronary syndrome undergoing angiography query proceed

Exclusion criteria

    1. Patients deemed to be in the terminal stage of illness; and patients who are unable to give informed consent.

    2. Atrial fibrillation with uncontrolled ventricular response at the time of procedure 3. The presence of a total occlusion of a coronary artery 4. Contra indications to coronary intervention 5. Patients with contraindications for cardiac MRI (See appendix) (15) 6. Patients with prior CABG 7. Patients who are claustrophobic 8. ST elevation myocardial infarction 9. Patients who have pace maker in situ 10. Patients on class I and III antiarrhythmics 11. Patients with haemodynamic instability

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Muzahir Tayebjee

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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