New treatments are required to improve health outcomes in patients with ischemic heart disease. This is especially so in developing countries such as Mauritius in which optimal therapy for acute myocardial infarction may not be widely available. For example for patients presenting with a heart attack (caused by a blockage in one of the heart blood vessels) the treatment of choice would be to remove the blockage by primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using an angioplasty balloon and put a stent (a spring-like structure) to keep the artery opened. However, PCI is not widely available in Mauritius and heart attack patients are given clot-busting therapy to remove the blockage, but this is not as effective as PCI. Therefore, in this research study we investigate a new cheap treatment that may help protect the heart against damage during a heart attack, called remote ischemic conditioning (RIC), in which a blood pressure cuff is placed on the upper arm and inflated for 5 minute and deflated for 5 minutes a cycle which is repeated 4 times in total in patients presenting with a heart attack. By temporarily depriving oxygen and nutrients to the arm with the blood pressure cuff a protective signal can be relayed to the heart to reduce the amount of damage occurring during the heart attack and thereby prevent the onset of heart failure. Study hypothesis: Remote ischaemic conditioning will reduce the amount of damage occurring to the heart muscle during a heart attack..
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
519
Victoria Hospital
Candos, Mauritius
Flacq Hospital
Centre de Flacq, Mauritius
Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam National Hospital
Pamplemousses, Mauritius
Dr AG Jeetoo Hospital
Port Louis, Mauritius
Jawaharlal Nehru Hospital
Rose Belle, Mauritius
Myocardial infarct size
Measured by 24 hr area under the curve serum CK-MB and Troponin-T sampled a time 0, 6, 12, and 24 hrs post-thrombolysis.
Time frame: Measured by 24 hr area under the curve serum CK-MB and Troponin-T sampled a time 0, 6, 12, and 24 hrs post-thrombolysis
Acute kidney injury
Measured by serum creatinine at 24 hours.
Time frame: Measured by serum creatinine at 24 hours
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