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28 clinical studies listed.

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Syncope

Tundra lists 28 Syncope clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT06526884

Quasi-Randomized Evaluation of the UCLA Next Day Clinic (NDC)

The Next Day Clinic (NDC) is a quality improvement initiative that will be launched and operated by UCLA Health starting July 22, 2024. Its goals are to improve patient care and safety and to maximize cost effectiveness. The way it does this is by identifying patients in the ED who would normally be admitted for low-acuity conditions, and diverting them to a high-acuity clinic the following day called the NDC. This will help decompress the ED and the hospital, and allow for overall higher quality care. The Health System has partnered with UCLA's Healthcare Value Analytics and Solutions \[UVAS\] group which specializes in these types of program evaluations. The analysis conducted by the study team will be used to directly inform NDC operations, scaling, and future plans.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-18

1 state

Pneumonia
Syncope
Congestive Heart Failure
+5
RECRUITING

NCT06472375

In Hospital 24 Hour Observation of Syncope Patients

Syncope is very common and has a broad differential diagnosis. Guidelines on syncope recommend to apply guideline based syncope algorithm (SA) to identify low- / intermediate risk syncope patients and recommend to discharge these patients. The time window when to discharge these patients is not defined in the guidelines. In current medical practice low- / intermediate risk syncope patients are either immediately discharged or discharged after 24-hour observation with telemetry (TM). There seems to be an equipoise for both treatment strategies in current medical practice for these low risk syncope patients. A randomized controlled trial to compare discharge after 24 hour observation including TM with immediate discharge has never been done on the Cardiac Emergency Room (CER).

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-02-24

Syncope
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT07118124

Pediatric Adhesion and New Dermal Approach Study

The purpose of this study is to see if the Zio® monitor device can be worn by children for up to 14-days and to determine if the skin preparation process will provide good adherence to the skin and clear signal quality. The Zio® monitor (Study Device) is an adhesive patch that is worn on the upper left chest for a specified period of time and is similar to a band aid. The Study Device contains a battery-powered heart monitor and will look at the heart rhythm and rate.

Gender: All

Ages: 1 Year - 17 Years

Updated: 2026-02-19

4 states

Syncope
Pediatric
Congenital Athymia
+3
RECRUITING

NCT07374263

Do QT-Prolonging Drugs Cause Major Adverse Cardiac Events in Hospitalized Adults?

There are 28 non-cardiology medications from multiple families costing more than $13 billion annually in Canada, categorized as 'Known' QT-prolonging medications (QTPmeds) based on very low levels of evidence. The association between many commonly used medications listed as known QTPmeds and actual major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is weak. Meanwhile, QTPmeds-related warnings are ubiquitous in every healthcare setting, triggering 'hard stop' disruption millions of times per day to front line clinicians. Poor quality medication safety alerts are increasingly recognized as a source of inferior patient care and provider burnout which detracts from healthcare sustainability. In this study, anonymized hospital electronic medical record data from more than 990,000 adult patients across Ontario will be used to compare patients who experience MACE with those who do not, measuring their real-time exposure to QT-prolonging drugs. Additionally, machine-learning techniques will also be used to find which patient or treatment factors best predict risk. The objectives of this study are to 1) Investigate whether exposure to one or more 'Known' QTPmed is associated with an increased risk of MACE after adjusting for confounders; and 2) Identify predictors and their relative importance for QTPmeds-associated MACE. In summary, QT-prolonging medications have the potential to cause very serious adverse events, including death. However, it is not sufficiently clear which patients under which circumstances suffer events, or when is QT prolongation a useful surrogate marker for harm. Meanwhile, ubiquitous medication alerts related to QT-prolonging medications are at best imprecise and at worst, misleading, costly and potentially dangerous. Now that data resources are available with the data elements, structure and sample size required to rigorously assess this association, this study will address this question to improve patient safety, provider satisfaction and the cost-effectiveness of care.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-01-28

1 state

Acquired Long QT
Ventricular Arrhythmias
Torsades de Pointes
+3
RECRUITING

NCT05066347

REmote Cardiac MOnitoring of At-risk SYNCope Patients After Emergency Department Discharge -RCT

Syncope (fainting) is a common reason for emergency department (ED) presentation. Fainting can be caused by heart conditions such as irregular heart rhythm (arrhythmia) that can be life-threatening, structural heart problems, or serious conditions not related to the heart. The standard or usual treatment for the majority of patients at-risk for irregular heart rhythm is getting discharged home with no heart rhythm monitoring. If patients receive any monitoring, only Holter monitoring device that records all heart beats for 24 hours to 72 hours will be used. One-third to half of irregular heart rhythm will be identified only after patients are either discharged from the ED or hospitalized in an inpatient unit. One-third to half of irregular heart rhythm will be identified only after patients are either discharged from the ED or hospitalized in an inpatient unit. The study hypothesize that prolonged live cardiac rhythm monitoring (15 days) of at-risk syncope patients, discharged from the ED, will lead to identification of irregular heart rhythm, which can lead to improved patient safety and lower healthcare costs.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-12-30

1 state

Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT04075084

Observation of Clinical Routine Care for Patients With BIOTRONIK Implantable Cardiac Monitors (ICMs)

This registry is performed for the long-term assessment of outcome, performance and residual safety aspects of the BIOMONITOR III and possible successors in a real-life clinical set-up. In addition, this registry is set up in a way that it may also be used as a platform for submodules to investigate additional scientific and regulatory aspects while minimizing the additional effort for the investigational sites and patients.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-10-01

Tachycardia
Atrial Fibrillation
Syncope
+2
RECRUITING

NCT02824822

Genetic Markers of Cardiovascular Disease in Epilepsy

Epilepsy is a common condition which affects over 3 million people in the US. Patients with uncontrolled epilepsy have a lifetime risk of sudden unexpected death (SUDEP) of 35%, which is greatest in those under 40 years of age. The exact mechanisms and causes are not understood but can be due to underlying conditions which affect the heart and brain, which may lead to dangerous heart rhythms and death. Some of these conditions which affect heart and brain have an identifiable genetic cause. This study aims to identify known genetic causes of heart rhythm and sudden death related disorders in patients with epilepsy.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 50 Years

Updated: 2025-09-08

1 state

Epilepsy
Seizures
Syncope
+2
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT05560126

Canadian Prehospital Syncope Risk Score (Prehospital CSRS)

Background: Syncope is defined as a sudden, brief loss of consciousness (LOC) followed by a rapid complete recovery. It accounts for 160,000 emergency department (ED) visits each year in Canada. Despite this, few people are hospitalized (\~15%) and even fewer will die (\~1%). Two-thirds of patients with syncope arrive at the ED by calling 911. There are many causes of syncope. Identifying patients at low risk for bad outcomes would allow paramedics to safely determine which patients need care in the ED from those who can remain home. The research team recently developed the Canadian Prehospital Syncope Risk Score (CPSRS) which accurately identified patients at low risk for 30-day serious outcomes. Objective: The goal of this study is to validate the accuracy of the CPSRS in the prehospital setting or refine if needed to predict the risk of 30-day serious outcomes for patients with syncope. Methods: The research team will enroll patients with syncope from five paramedic services across Canada (British Columbia - Vancouver and Kelowna areas only, London-Middlesex, York Region, Frontenac, and Ottawa). The research team will exclude patients \<18 years old, LOC \>5 minutes, changes in mental status from baseline, alcohol or drug intoxication, or language barrier. Paramedics will fill out a study data collection form with the CPSRS items and additional data should the tool need refinement. The data will be entered into a secure database and will assess patient outcomes (death and potentially life-threatening medical conditions) at 30 days. The research team will examine model accuracy using standard prediction measures and look to improve model accuracy if needed. The research team expects to enroll 4875 patients over a 1-year recruitment period based on annual call volumes. Expected Outcomes: Once validated, the tool could reduce the number of patients transported to the hospital by identifying those at low risk. This would improve patient-oriented care, while at the same time saving valuable paramedic and ED resources.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-07-31

1 state

Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT06854484

AVEIR™ Leadless Pacemaker (LP) United Kingdom (UK) Registry

This observational study will follow patients requiring implantation of leadless pacemaker for 5 years after implantation. The main goal is to evaluate the long term safety and efficacy of AVEIR™ leadless pacemaker device in the usual clinical settings within the UK National Health Service. In addition, the study will collect data to understand patient characteristics receiving this type of pacemaker.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-07-29

1 state

Bradycardia
Atrio-Ventricular Block
Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT04755101

Efficacy of a Right-sided Ablation of the Anterior Ganglionated Plexus for Neurally Mediated Syncope

The third study on CardNM (CardNMH3 study) is a multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial with a sham control group investigating the efficacy and safety of a computed tomography (CT)-guided, right-sided ablation of the anterior ganglionated plexus to prevent recurrence of syncope in patients with neurally mediated syncope (NMS). The primary goal of the study is to determine whether a CT-guided, right-sided ablation of the anterior ganglionated plexus safely reduces the risk of recurrent episodes of syncope in patients with a history of recurrent NMS. Two-third of the patients will be randomized to the active arm and one-third to the control arm (sham). The study procedure is described in the 'detailed description' and 'intervention description'. Syncope burden, syncope occurrence and quality of life will be assessed by questionnaires at baseline and at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months. A 24-h rhythm registration will be performed at baseline and at 1-, 3- and 6-month follow-up to investigate the influence of the intervention on heart rate. The effect of CardNM on blood pressure and on chronotropic sinus node function will be evaluated in 2 additional substudies. Patients enrolled in the blood-pressure substudy will undergo a 24-h blood pressure monitoring at baseline and at 1, 3 and 6 months. Participants in the sinus node competence substudy will undergo a bicycle exercise test at baseline and at 1, 3 and 6 months. Investigators aim to achieve complete follow-up for 110 patients who meet the study enrollment criteria. If syncope-free survival (primary endpoint) is significantly different between the 2 arms after the enrollment of fewer than 110 patients (minimum 55 patients), enrollment into the trial will be prematurely stopped. The study may also be terminated prematurely if safety concerns occur.

Gender: All

Ages: 14 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-04-24

Syncope, Neurogenic
Syncope
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT01548352

BAsel Syncope EvaLuation (BASEL IX) Study

Syncope is a major health problem. In the emergency department (ED), the management of patients with syncope still remains a clinical challenge because underlying diseases and prognosis can be extremely various. Structural heart disease and primary electrical disorders are major risk factors for sudden cardiac death and mortality in patients with syncope. In contrast, patients with reflex syncope and exclusion of structural heart disease have an excellent prognosis. Therefore The investigators test the hypothesis that the use of a meticulous patient history, clinical examination and novel biomarkers can improve the rapid and accurate diagnosis of cardiac syncope in patients presenting to the ED and is able to improve risk stratification regarding adverse outcomes. The prospective multicenter cohort study is designed to enroll 720 patients presenting with transient loss of consciousness within the last 12 hours to the ED. Blood samples for the measurement of novel biomarkers will be obtained at presentation. All patients will be contacted by phone at 6, 12 and 24 months to determine major adverse events (death, resuscitation, recurrence of syncope, hospitalization for syncope).

Gender: All

Ages: 40 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-04-15

4 states

Syncope
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT06503653

Creation of a Syncope Channel for Patients Admitted to the Emergency Department for Loss of Consciousness and Not Hospitalized: Etiological Predictivity (Before/After Study)

The main aim of this study is to assess the value of creating a "syncope pathway" to optimize diagnostic performance in patients admitted to the emergency department for syncope and not hospitalized, compared with the previous pre-syncope pathway situation.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-04-10

1 state

Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT04972071

SW-RCT Implementation of Canadian Syncope Risk Score Based Practice Recommendations

Syncope is a common reason for emergency department (ED) presentation. While often benign, some patients have serious and life-threatening underlying causes, both cardiac and non-cardiac, which may or may not be apparent at the time of the initial ED assessment. Identifying which patients will benefit from further investigation, ongoing monitoring and/or hospital admission is essential to reduce both adverse outcomes and high costs. The research team has spent over a decade developing the evidence base for a risk stratification tool directed at optimizing the accuracy of ED decisions: the Canadian Syncope Risk Score (CSRS). This tool is now ready for the final phase of its introduction into clinical practice, namely a robust, multicentre implementation trial of the CSRS-based practice recommendations to demonstrate its real-world effectiveness. These recommendations, if applied, could lead to reduction in hospitalization with only 6% of high-risk patients requiring hospitalization, shorter ED lengths of stay for the 76% of ED syncope patients who are at low risk for 30-day serious outcomes, and more standardized disposition decisions, specifically discharge of 18% of medium-risk patients after appropriate discussion. Hence, the investigators hypothesize that an important reduction in hospitalization and ED disposition time can be achieved by implementing the CSRS-based recommendations with potential improvements in patient safety. The overall objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the knowledge translation (KT) of the CSRS-based practice recommendations in multiple Canadian EDs using a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial (SW-CRT) on health care efficiency and patient safety.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-03-27

4 states

Syncope
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT04790058

CSRS Implementation - A Pilot Study

Syncope is a common reason for emergency department (ED) presentation. While often benign, some patients have serious and life-threatening underlying causes, both cardiac and non-cardiac, which may or may not be apparent at the time of the initial ED assessment. Identifying which patients will benefit from further investigation, ongoing monitoring and/or hospital admission is essential to reduce both adverse outcomes and the high costs. Our group has spent over a decade developing the evidence base for a risk stratification tool directed at optimizing the accuracy of ED decisions: the Canadian Syncope Risk Score (CSRS). This tool is now ready for the final phase of its introduction into clinical practice, namely a robust, multicentre implementation trial of the CSRS based practice recommendations to demonstrate its real-world effectiveness. Prior to the launch of the large-scale implementation trial, a pilot study to assess primarily the feasibility and secondarily the effectiveness is needed.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-03-24

1 state

Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT06699056

AI-Enabled Direct-from-ECG Ejection Fraction (EF) Severity Assessment Using COR ECG Wearable Monitor

This prospective, multicenter, cluster-randomized controlled study aims to evaluate the accuracy of an investigational artificial intelligence (AI) Software as a Medical Device (SaMD) designed to compute ejection fraction (EF) severity categories based on the American Society of Echocardiography's (ASE) 4-category scale. The software analyzes continuous ECG waveform data acquired by the FDA-cleared Peerbridge COR® ECG Wearable Monitor, an ambulatory patch device designed for use during daily activities. The AI software assists clinicians in cardiac evaluations by estimating EF severity, which reflects how well the heart pumps blood. In this study, EF severity determination will be made using 5-minute ECG recordings collected during a 15-minute resting period with participants seated upright. The results will be compared to EF severity obtained from an FDA-cleared, non-contrast transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) predicate device. This comparison aims to validate the accuracy of the AI software.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-02-11

7 states

Ventricular Ejection Fraction
LVF
LV Dysfunction
+12
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06763549

COR-INSIGHT: Optimizing Cardiovascular and Cardiopulmonary Outcomes with AI-Driven Multiplexed Indications Using COR ECG Wearable

The COR-INSIGHT trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness of Peerbridge COR advanced ambulatory ECG wearables (COR 1.0 and COR 2.0) in accurately and non-invasively detecting cardiovascular and cardiopulmonary conditions using AI-based software (CardioMIND and CardioQSync). The study devices offer non-invasive, multiplexed, AI-enabled direct-from-ECG detection as a novel alternative to traditional diagnostic methods, including imaging, hemodynamic monitoring systems, catheter-based devices, and biochemical assays. Continuous COR ECG data collected in hospital, outpatient clinic, or home settings will be analyzed to evaluate the predictive accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and performance of these devices in differentiating between screen-positive and screen-negative subjects. The panel of screened indications encompasses a broad spectrum of clinically relevant cardiovascular, cardiopulmonary, and sleep-related diagnostic parameters, which are critical for advanced patient assessment and management. In the cardiovascular domain, the protocol emphasizes the detection and classification of heart failure, assessment of ejection fraction severity, and identification of myocardial infarction, including pathological Q-waves and STEMI. It further addresses diagnostic markers for arrhythmogenic conditions such as QT interval prolongation, T-wave alternans, and ventricular tachycardia, as well as insights into ischemia, atrial enlargement, ventricular activation time, and heart rate turbulence. Additional parameters, such as heart rate variability, pacing efficacy, electrolyte imbalances, and structural abnormalities, including left ventricular hypertrophy, contribute to comprehensive cardiovascular risk stratification. In the non-invasive cardiopulmonary context, the protocol incorporates metrics like respiratory sinus arrhythmia, cardiac output, stroke volume, and stroke volume variability, providing critical insights into hemodynamic and autonomic function. The inclusion of direct-from-ECG metrics for sleep-related disorders, such as the apnea-hypopnea index, respiratory disturbance index, and oxygen saturation variability, underscores the protocol's utility in addressing the intersection of cardiopulmonary and sleep medicine. This multifaceted approach establishes a robust framework for precision diagnostics and holistic patient management. The COR 1.0 and COR 2.0 wearables provide multi-lead ECG recordings, with COR 2.0 offering extended capabilities for cardiopulmonary metrics and longer battery life (up to 14 days). COR 2.0 supports tri-modal operations: (i) Extended Holter Mode: Outputs Leads II and III, mirroring the functionality of COR 1.0 for broader ECG monitoring applications. (ii) Cardiopulmonary Mode: Adds real-time recording of Lead I, V2, respiratory impedance, and triaxial accelerometer outputs, providing advanced cardiopulmonary insights. (iii) Real-Time Streaming Mode: Streams data directly to mobile devices or computers via Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), enabling real-time waveform rendering and analysis. The COR 2.0 units are experimental and not yet FDA-cleared. Primary endpoints include sensitivity (true positive rate) \> 80%, specificity (true negative rate) \> 90%, and statistical agreement with reference devices for cardiovascular, cardiopulmonary, and sleep metrics. Secondary endpoints focus on predictive values (PPV and NPV) and overall diagnostic performance. The study employs eight distinct sub-protocols (A through H) to address a variety of cardiovascular, cardiopulmonary, and sleep-related diagnostic goals. These sub-protocols are tailored to specific clinical endpoints, varying in duration (30 minutes to 14 days) and type of data collection. Up to 15,000 participants will be enrolled across multiple sub-protocols. Screening ensures eligibility, and subjects must provide informed consent before participation. Dropouts and non-compliant subjects will be excluded from final analyses.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-01-08

1 state

Cardiopulmonary Failure
Myocardial Infarction (MI)
Heart Decompensation
+38
RECRUITING

NCT05776810

Syncope Trial to Understand Tilt Testing or ECG Recording Tenth Prevention of Syncope Trial

The Study To Understand Tilt Tests versus Extended Recordings (STUTTER, POST 10) will test the hypothesis that first performing a diagnostic HUT in older patients with syncope of unknown cause will provide earlier and more diagnoses than inserting an ICM.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 110 Years

Updated: 2024-12-19

1 state

Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT05621460

The Effect of Water Carbonation on Orthostatic Tolerance

The primary purpose of this investigation is to determine whether water carbonation can improve orthostatic tolerance in healthy control volunteers. Orthostatic tolerance refers to the ability to maintain an adequate blood pressure when standing. In some individuals blood pressure can fall when standing, predisposing to dizzy spells or fainting episodes. Drinking water can boost blood pressure and making fainting episodes less likely. However, it is not clear whether the carbonation of the water has any further impact on the blood pressure response. This is important because it may be that carbonated water expands the stomach (gastric distension), provoking an increase in sympathetic activity. The increase in sympathetic nervous system activity boosts blood pressure. Resolving this question would have important implications for patients with syncope. This study will test whether carbonated water will have any further impact on blood pressure than the already known effect of non-carbonated water.

Gender: All

Ages: 19 Years - 50 Years

Updated: 2024-11-27

1 state

Orthostatic Hypotension
Syncope
Vasovagal Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT02448485

High-Sensitivity Troponin T Plasma Levels in Patients With Aortic Stenosis (Tyrolean Aortic Stenosis Study-2)

TASS-2 (Tyrolean Aortic Stenosis Study-2) aims to characterize the clinical value of minimally elevated troponin T plasma levels both in patients with asymptomatic and symtomatic aortic stenosis.

Gender: All

Updated: 2024-08-01

1 state

Aortic Stenosis
Heart Failure
Syncope
+1
RECRUITING

NCT04615065

Acutelines: a Large Data-/Biobank of Acute and Emergency Medicine

Research in acute care faces many challenges, including enrollment challenges, legal limitations in data sharing, limited funding, and lack of singular ownership of the domain of acute care. To overcome some of these challenges, the Center of Acute Care of the University Medical Center Groningen in the Netherlands, has established a de novo data-, image- and biobank named "Acutelines". Acutelines is initiated to improve recognition and treatment of acute diseases and obtain insight in the consequences of acute diseases, including factors predicting its outcome. Thereby, Acutelines contributes to development of personalized treatment and improves prediction of patient outcomes after an acute admission.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-06-13

Acute Disease
Sepsis
Pneumonia
+16
RECRUITING

NCT06431828

Remote Symptom Review in Patients With Implantable Diagnostic Holter

To study the clinical and organizational benefit of implementing a methodology for monitoring patients receiving an implantable diagnostic BIOMONITOR III holter and successive models, consisting of remote review of alerts sent by the device via the HOME MONITORING remote monitoring platform and the transmission of relevant patient symptoms through the use of a specific application installable on the patient's phone. The efficiency of this methodology will be compared with a control group consisting of monitoring through the usual clinical practice of the hospital.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years

Updated: 2024-05-31

Atrial Fibrillation
Syncope
Bradycardia
+1
RECRUITING

NCT05755737

A Proof of Principle Study of Ondansetron for the Prevention of Vasovagal Syncope: The Eleventh Prevention of Syncope Trial (POST11)

About 20% of adults faint recurrently. These patients are often highly symptomatic, have problems with employment and driving, can be injured, and have poor quality of life. There are few therapies that have withstood the test of randomized clinical trials. the investigators will conduct a prospective, randomized, parallel, double-blind, proof-of-concept study that tests the hypothesis that serotonin 5HT3 receptor inhibition with ondansetron prevents tilt-induced vasovagal syncope (VVS) and pre-syncope in patients with clinical VVS. A total of 70 patients with quantitative clinical diagnostic criteria for VVS and at least 1 syncopal spell in the preceding year will be randomized in a double-blind acute phase 2 study to ondansetron 8 mg PO BID x 2 doses or matching placebo. The endpoint will be presyncope or syncope associated with diagnostic hemodynamic changes. These data should provide useful preliminary data as a foundation on which to conduct a subsequent randomized clinical trial.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 100 Years

Updated: 2024-05-10

1 state

Vasovagal Syncope (VVS)
Syncope
RECRUITING

NCT06087497

The Z Stitch Early Bed Rest Assessment Study

The goal of this study is to understand the effects of early mobilization after a Z stitch procedure in patients undergoing certain heart-related treatments. The investigators want to find out if allowing patients to move around sooner after their procedure can improve their satisfaction and potentially lead to earlier discharge from the hospital. Type of Study: Clinical Trial Participant Population/Health Conditions: Patients aged 18-99 undergoing specific heart procedures such as atrial fibrillation treatment, atrial flutter treatment, supraventricular tachycardia treatment, diagnostic electrophysiology studies, AV node ablation, or Watchman device placement. Main Questions: Does early mobilization (getting up and moving around sooner) after the Z stitch procedure improve patient satisfaction? Participants will be divided into two groups, and researchers will compare those who have one hour of bedrest with those who have four hours of bedrest after the Z stitch procedure. The investigators want to see if the shorter bedrest period leads to higher patient satisfaction.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 99 Years

Updated: 2024-04-15

1 state

Atrial Fibrillation
Atrial Flutter
Supraventricular Tachycardia
+2
RECRUITING

NCT06356207

Syncope-Asystole Latency Time in Tilt Table Test: The SALT-TILT Study

Syncope is a common presenting condition. Pacemaker implantation can significantly reduce syncope recurrences in reflex syncope. However, despite careful selection, a substantial proportion of patients treated with pacemakers suffer recurrences of syncope. It is thought that a pronounced vasodepressor component may hinder the efficacy of pacing in patients, preventing adequate cerebral perfusion during the reflex, thus relativizing the anti-bradycardia function of the pacemaker to prevent syncope. It is hypothesised that the time elapsed from the actual loss of consciousness to the asystole recorded on the ECG during Tilt Table Test may be predictive in terms of response to pacemaker therapy, so this parameter becomes the subject of the present study.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-04-11

Syncope
Pacemaker
Asystole
+1