Find NHLBI Clinical Trials

Search selected NHLBI-supported clinical trials and observational studies by condition, location, or age group. You can also view the complete list of NHLBI-funded studies at ClinicalTrials.gov.

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Showing 71 - 74 out of 74 results
Recruiting
Missouri
Is your newborn in the neonatal intensive care unit at St. Louis Children’s Hospital? This study aims to better understand breathing problems and blood flow through the heart in premature newborns to better detect conditions such as pulmonary hypertension. To participate in this study, your newborn must have been born prematurely between 24 and 29 weeks’ gestation and be a patient in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. This study is located in St. Louis, Missouri.
Child
Recruiting
Maryland
Missouri
South Carolina
Do you or your child have Williams Syndrome (WS) or supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) or are you interested in helping research on these conditions? The blood vessels in people with WS or SVAS have less elasticity, which can cause them to narrow. This study aims to see how blood vessel differences in people with these conditions affect organs in the body including the heart, gut, kidneys, and brain. This study is open to people with one of these conditions or healthy volunteers between 3 and 85 years old. The study takes place at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda,
All Ages
Accepting Healthy Volunteers
Recruiting
Maryland
Missouri
Do you or your child have Williams-Beuren syndrome (WS) or Supravalvular Aortic Stenosis (SVAS)? Symptoms of both conditions include vascular problems that can be mild or serious. Researchers want to find out why only some people with WS and SVAS have serious symptoms while others do not. Participants in this study will provide blood or saliva samples to help researchers see what DNA or environmental changes affect the severity of the disease. This study is located at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.
All Ages
Recruiting
Missouri
North Carolina
Do you or your child have primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) or primary immune deficiency (PID)? This study aims to identify genes that cause these two conditions, which can have similar symptoms. The results from this study will help researchers find new ways to treat breathing and hearing problems caused by these two conditions in a cross-sectional cohort of patients with PCD and PID. Participants in this study must be 5 to 45 years old. This study is taking place at multiple locations in the United States and in Canada.
Child, Adult