Mobile MRI vans hunt for silent heart failure in german cities
NCT ID NCT07185100
First seen Sep 30, 2025 · Last updated May 15, 2026 · Updated 21 times
Summary
This study aims to find out how many people in large German cities have early, symptom-free heart failure. Researchers will use a mobile MRI scanner, quality-of-life surveys, and blood tests to screen 600 adults with risk factors like diabetes, high blood pressure, or obesity. No treatment is given; the goal is to measure how common hidden heart failure is and compare results with a similar rural study.
Disclaimer
Read more
Show less
This is a summary of
the original study
.
Summaries may miss details or leave out important information. Before applying or accepting participation, make sure you have read and understood the full study. Curemydisease.com takes no responsibility whatsoever for anything missed, misunderstood, or acted upon as a result of our summary — we know it does not capture everything.
This is a summary of the original study . Summaries may miss details or leave out important information. Before applying or accepting participation, make sure you have read and understood the full study. Curemydisease.com takes no responsibility whatsoever for anything missed, misunderstood, or acted upon as a result of our summary — we know it does not capture everything.
Get updates
Get notified about this study
Sign up to get updates when this study changes or when new studies for HEART FAILURE WITH PRESERVED EJECTION FRACTION (HFPEF are added.
By submitting, you agree to our Terms of use
Contacts and locations
Show contact details
Enter your email to view the contact information for this study.
By submitting, you agree to our Terms of use
Study contacts
-
Contact
Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••
-
Contact
Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••
Locations
-
Deutsches Herzzentrum der Charité
RECRUITINGBerlin, 13353, Germany
Contact Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••
Contact Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••
Conditions
Explore the condition pages connected to this study.