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Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease in High Risk Diabetic Patients: Comparison Between Stress Echocardiography and Stress Scintigraphy in the Detection of Silent Myocardial Ischemia
This study is currently recruiting participants.
Study NCT00202670   Information provided by Société Française de Cardiologie
First Received: September 13, 2005   Last Updated: January 18, 2006   History of Changes

September 13, 2005
January 18, 2006
January 2004
 
 
 
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00202670 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
 
 
 
Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease in High Risk Diabetic Patients: Comparison Between Stress Echocardiography and Stress Scintigraphy in the Detection of Silent Myocardial Ischemia
Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease in High Risk Diabetic Patients: Comparison Between Stress Echocardiography and Stress Scintigraphy in the Detection of Silent Myocardial Ischemia

The aim of this study is to determine in high risk diabetics if the positive predictive value of stress echocardiography is superior to the positive predictive value of stress scintigraphy in the diagnosis of coronary stenosis > 50%

 
Phase IV
Observational
Screening, Longitudinal, Random Sample, Prospective Study
Diabetes Mellitus
 
 
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Recruiting
220
January 2008
 

Inclusion Criteria:

  • type 2 diabetic patients in women> 60 yo or men > 55 yo, with high risk of coronary artery disease (EF < 40%, ECG abnormalities, renal failure , 2 others risk factors of atherosclerosis)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • previous documented CAD acute coronary syndrome
Both
18 Years and older
No
Contact: Sophie Jacqueminet, MD 33 1 42 17 80 61 sophie.jacqueminet@psl.ap-hop-paris.fr
France
 
NCT00202670
 
2003-04
Société Française de Cardiologie
 
Principal Investigator: Claude Le Feuvre, MD AP-HP
Société Française de Cardiologie
January 2004

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP