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Browse 6,279 clinical trials for heart disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT03505788
This clinical research study is being conducted in multiple hospitals in Belgium and approximately 519 patients with acute decompensated heart failure are expected to participate. Large-scale research shows that 90% of the physicians treat volume overload with high doses of loop diuretics. However, there is not a lot of scientific data available regarding the optimal doses of these diuretic medications. In addition, it is observed that a lot of people, treated with these drugs, are being readmitted to the hospital due to a new episode of heart failure. The hypothesis of this study is that the volume overload could be better treated when patients receive a combination of different types of diuretics. Additionally, the total dose of the administrated diuretics might be lower this way.
NCT06661434
The study was conductede to examined the prevalence of obesity in a large Danish ACHD cohort, stratified according to age, sex and disease severities. To do so, ACHD patients were matched by age and sex with controls from the contemporary Copenhagen General Population Study
NCT06659302
Children with congenital heart disease are at much higher risk for behavioral and emotional difficulties in early childhood and beyond 1. However, intervention programs aimed at this population are limited and few have explored the efficacy of behavioral parent training on child behavior and parent stress in children with CHD. Few evidence-based behavior intervention programs are available in the community for families of children with CHD and behavioral struggles and many families struggle to stick with long-term treatment given the multiple appointments and responsibilities that are often already associated in parenting children with chronic health conditions. As such, more targeted, shorter and more accessible interventions are very needed. Established internet-based treatments such as I-InTERACT-North, are particularly well-suited for adaptation to stepped-care delivery due to prior implementation success, readily adaptable intensity of online content and therapist contact. This study will evaluate whether I-InTERACT North is a feasible intervention to implement in a step-care model and whether it is acceptable to families and impacts behavior and family functioning.