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UnknownNCT05923840

Chemoreflex and Baroreflex Alterations Causing Postural Tachycardia Syndrome With Orthostatic Hyperpnea and Hypocapnia

Mechanism of Chemoreflex and Baroreflex Alterations Causing Postural Tachycardia Syndrome in POTS Patients With Orthostatic Hyperpnea and Hypocapnia

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (estimated)
Sponsor
New York Medical College · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
15 Years – 39 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS) is the most common chronic cause of postural lightheadedness, and upright confusion afflicting many Americans, mostly young women. Many POTS patients hyperventilate by increasing their depth of breathing that produces tachycardia, alters blood flow and blood pooling in the body and importantly reduces brain blood flow causing "brain fog". In this proposal the investigators will demonstrate in young women that abnormal repeated brief impairment of blood pressure and brain flow just after standing sensitizes the body's oxygen sensor in POTS to respond as if it were in a low oxygen environment causing hyperventilation and its consequences. In this project the investigators will use various drugs that will help to understand the mechanisms that cause POTS in this unique subset of POTS patients who hyperventilate.

Detailed description

The Investigators will compare results from female POTS patients, free of known pulmonary or sleep disorders aged 15 to 39 years with, and without orthostatic hyperpneic hypocapnia, to healthy female volunteers with the following two (2) specific aims: 1. To test poikilocapnic (allowing carbon dioxide (CO2) to vary) orthostatic cardiorespiratory responses to determine whether prolonged initial orthostatic hypotension (IOH) precedes upright hypocapnia in hyperpneic POTS but not in controls or non-hyperpneic POTS. Subjects are instrumented for cerebral blood flow, respiratory and hemodynamic measurements, investigating splanchnic blood flow by indocyanine green infusion, and measuring changes of CBV, regional blood volumes, and cardiac output (CO) by impedance plethysmography during a 10 min stand to quantify IOH, and a 10 min tilt test to 70⁰ to quantitate cardiorespiratory changes. These changes during tilt stratify hyperpneic and non-hyperpneic POTS. 2. To test if chemoreflex sensitization of ventilation and sympathetic activity (by microneurography) are abnormal when supine and tilted upright at 45o and how that interacts with Oxford measured cardiovagal and sympathetic baroreflexes under controlled gas conditions which are: isocapnic hypoxia and isocapnic hyperoxia to measure carotid body reflex; hyperoxic isocapnia and hyperoxic hypercapnia to measure central chemoreflexes. Hyperoxia silences peripheral chemoreceptors and will normalize baroreflex and tilt responses.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTChemoreflex TestingThe carotid body chemoreflex can be tested by holding carbon dioxide (CO2) constant (isocapnic) and applying hypoxia and hyperoxia. Measurements are then made of expiratory minute volume and of sympathetic activity. The central chemoreflex measures isocapnic and hypercapnic responses in the presence of hyperoxia to suppress the carotid body chemoreflex.
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTBaroreflex testingBaroreceptors are measured by the change of heart rate (HR) and sympathetic activity with changing blood pressure using the modified Oxford technique. Blood pressure is lowered an amount by a bolus of sodium nitroprusside and then raised by a bolus of phenylephrine. When standing baroreflexes are activated and the investigators will measure chemoreflex activity upright to see how baroreflex effects the chemoreflexes. Similarly chemoreflexes affect the baroreflexes best observed when the patients are supine.
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTOrthostatic stress testingOrthostatic Stress tests are administered in two forms: a standing test to evoke the initial orthostatic hypotensive response that sensitizes and triggers the carotid body chemoreflex by intermittent stagnant ischemia. And the 70 degree upright tilt test that best identifies causal changes in regional blood volumes and flows and in respiratory patterns of hyperpneic hypocapnia.

Timeline

Start date
2022-09-23
Primary completion
2023-08-31
Completion
2024-08-31
First posted
2023-06-28
Last updated
2023-06-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05923840. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.