Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00976417

Mechanisms of Action of Adaptive Servoventilation

Mechanisms of Action of Adaptive Servoventilation: Ventilatory Control in Heart Failure Patients With Central Sleep Apnoea

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
ResMed · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

It is known that a significant proportion of patients with heart failure have sleep disordered breathing (SDB). Some of these patients will have Central Sleep Apnoea which is one form of SDB. The SERVE-HF study aims to look at the effect of a breathing support machine, or ventilator called Adaptive Servo-ventilation (ASV) on mortality in heart failure patients with central sleep apnoea. In this related sub-study the investigators want to look at how the ASV machine has its effect. The investigators will be carrying out tests in the laboratory to measure various aspects of the way that breathing is controlled to measure the effect that ASV has on patients. In addition measurements looking at activity levels will be made using an actiwatch device worn by patients for 14 consecutive days and nights. Healthy controls will be recruited to all parts of this protocol (ie measurements at baseline and 3 months) to allow comparison of data between patients and controls.

Detailed description

As part of a wider study we are interested in how patients with a failing heart breathe during sleep. It is known that patients with heart failure and central sleep apnoea (a form of breathing difficulty during sleep) have a poorer prognosis. It is likely that this is because this condition places an extra strain on the heart. We want to investigate whether or not treating these breathing problems is of benefit to this group of patients. The proposed study will investigate why a significant proportion of patients with heart failure have central sleep apnoea and how they respond to treatment. We will do this by measuring some of the factors which contribute to how they breathe: (i) How the brain changes the breathing rate and depth in response to a change in carbon dioxide levels (Chemosensitivity); (ii) How the blood vessels in the brain change in response to a change in carbon dioxide levels (Cerebral Vascular Reactivity); (iii) An overall measure of breathing control called "Loop Gain" (this protocol will only be undertaken in a subgroup of patients who will give specific consent). These measurements will be carried out in the laboratory in patients taking part in SERVE-HF; a multicentre randomised controlled study of adaptive servoventilation (ASV). ASV is a form of non-invasive ventilation (delivered by a mask worn on the face) shown in previous smaller studies to adequately suppress sleep disordered breathing. The proposed study will allow us to take measurements from patients assigned to both the treatment and control groups; and compare measurements made in both groups at the start of treatment and at three months. In addition measurements looking at activity levels will be made using an actiwatch device worn by patients for 14 consecutive days and nights. Previously it has been demonstrated that heart failure patients with sleep disordered breathing have lower levels of daytime activity when compared to heart failure patients without sleep disordered breathing. We will investigate the effect of ASV on activity measurements on this patients with sleep disordered breathing. Healthy controls will be recruited to all parts of this protocol (ie measurements at baseline and 3 months) to allow comparison of data between patients and controls.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2009-09-01
Primary completion
2011-10-01
Completion
2011-10-01
First posted
2009-09-14
Last updated
2011-12-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00976417. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.