5 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
The purpose of the study is to assess the effectiveness and safety of a new device called an Intramural Needle Ablation Catheter (INA catheter). The INA catheter is used for locating and ablating ventricular arrhythmias that have failed standard radiofrequency ablation. This approach is desirable because some people have ventricular arrhythmias that originate deep within the heart muscle where it is not abolished by ablation with standard catheters. The investigators seek to determine whether the INA catheter can potentially help people who have ventricular arrhythmias that have failed standard radiofrequency ablation. The investigators also want to determine if it is likely to be safe, without excessive side effects.
This is a multicenter, prospective, parallel, randomized controlled trial to test for non-inferiority with an ILAM-guided VT ablation compared to conventional voltage- based ablation. The study has two treatment arms: conventional voltage mapping and ablation (control arm). In the investigational arm, the ablation strategy is guided by ILAM to target deceleration zones, blinded to voltage mapping. In the control arm, ablation will be performed to extensively ablate all low voltage regions (\<1.5mV) during sinus rhythm, right ventricular (RV) pacing, or left ventricular (LV) pacing, with discretionary use of pacemapping and activation mapping. In both arms, mapping with be performed with a multielectrode catheter (HD Grid) and ablation will be performed using an irrigated tip catheter (FlexAbility SE or Tactiflex catheters). In the control armonly voltage mapping displays will be utilized (blinded to functional ILAM and fractionation). High density mapping with automated last deflection annotation (Ensite X) will be performed in all patients randomized to ILAM approach during either sinus rhythm or RV pacing.
Sphere-9 VT is a prospective, multi-center, non-randomized, unblinded feasibility study. Adult subjects with recurrent, sustained, monomorphic ventricular tachycardia due to prior myocardial infarction will be enrolled and treated with the Sphere-9 Catheter and Affera Ablation System.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of Sodium Zirconium Cyclosilicate (SZC) on arrhythmia-related cardiovascular outcomes in participants on chronic hemodialysis with recurrent hyperkalemia.
This is a prospective multicenter randomized open-label study aiming to assess whether endocardial or endocardial-epicardial ablation is superior to the standard approach (i.e., Antiarrhythmic drugs) in achievement of long-term ventricular tachycardia (VT) treatment success.