Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00354354

Bronchodilators and Oxygen Kinetics With Exercise in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Patients

Bronchodilator Effect on O2 Deficit and V'O2 Kinetics During Moderate Intensity Exercise in Normoxemic COPD.

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
12 (actual)
Sponsor
Queen's University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Hypothesis: The reduction of dynamic hyperinflation and its negative effects on the respiratory system following a bronchodilator could lead to an improvement of cardiac function in terms of increased cardiac output. This may enhance oxygen delivery to the exercising muscles in COPD patients. Bronchodilator administration may also have an indirect effect on V'O2 kinetics via its action on cardiovascular and pulmonary variables. Objectives: 1. To evaluate the effects of a bronchodilators on V'E , V'CO2 , and V'O2 kinetics in COPD during constant work-rate cycle exercise, and to evaluate whether bronchodilators will accelerate, indirectly, phase 2 kinetics (usually slower in COPD patients than normal subjects) and shorten t for V'E, V'CO2 , and V'O2 and shorten half-times for HR and O2 pulse, thus showing an improvement of oxygen transport to the peripheral active muscles. 2. To determine the impact of a bronchodilator-induced reduction in dynamic hyperinflation, and its effects on cardiovascular and pulmonary function, on exercise limitation in COPD.

Detailed description

The inability to engage in the usual activities of daily living is one of the most distressing experiences of people afflicted with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Exercise intolerance progresses relentlessly as the disease advances and can lead to virtual immobility and social isolation. Our understanding of the complex interface between physiological impairment and disability in COPD has increased considerably in recent years. It has become clear that in COPD, exercise intolerance ultimately reflects integrated abnormalities of the ventilatory, cardiovascular, peripheral muscle and neurosensory systems. Ventilatory constraint is the dominant contributor to exercise limitation in more advanced disease. Recently, important studies have been conducted on the role of peripheral muscle dysfunction in exercise limitation in COPD. The present study will test the hypothesis that the administration of bronchodilators (i.e., inhaled β2-agonist and inhaled anticholinergics in combination) in normoxemic COPD patients during moderate-intensity constant-load exercise may result in an enhancement of oxidative metabolism, reflected by reductions of O2 def and phase 2 tV'O2. Fifteen normoxemic patients with stable COPD (FEV1 less than 60 % predicted) and severe chronic breathlessness (Baseline Dyspnea Index less than 6) will complete the study. Each patient will perform three visits. At the first visit, patients will be familiarized with the various questionnaires and scales for rating the intensity and quality of symptoms and they will carry out pulmonary function testing and a symptom-limited incremental cycle exercise test in order to determine the anaerobic threshold (AT), the peak work-rate and the peak oxygen uptake. Each patient will subsequently complete two visits in which they will receive either nebulized bronchodilator (BD) (Combivent®, ipratropium 0.5 mg + salbutamol 2.5 mg) or placebo (PL), in random order. At 90-100 minutes post-dose, patients will perform pulmonary function tests, then they will perform a constant-load exercise test at 80% of AT V'O2. During constant-load exercise tests (2nd and 3rd visit), small samples of blood from the earlobe of each subject will be collected in order to determine the level of lactate and breathing gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) in the blood.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGCombiventNebulized Combivent (4 mL) or saline solution (0.9% NaCl) (4 mL) will be administered once only to subjects.

Timeline

Start date
2006-03-01
Primary completion
2009-07-01
Completion
2009-07-01
First posted
2006-07-20
Last updated
2011-04-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00354354. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.