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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07118410

Resistance Exercise With Blood Flow Restriction by Vascular Occlusion on Myocardial Function in Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction

Effect of Resistance Exercise With Blood Flow Restriction by Vascular Occlusion on Myocardial Function in Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
38 (estimated)
Sponsor
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nīmes · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Exercise is essential in cardiac rehabilitation for heart failure patients.Aerobic training and resistance training are both recommended. Resistance training improves muscle mass and strength and also improves the remodeling of cardiac function, thus reducing exercise intolerance in these patients. However, to obtain these adaptations, resistance training must be done at moderate to high intensities, which cannot always be sustained by the most fragile and deconditioned patients, such as those with reduced ejection fraction (Heart failure with reduced Ejection Fraction). Blood flow restriction (BFR) by vascular occlusion training is an interesting alternative to conventional resistance training for these deconditioned patients. Preclinical and clinical studies have shown that, for low-intensity regimens, resistance training and blood flow restriction by vascular occlusion improves muscle strength and left ventricular function, unlike resistance training alone. Tissue hypoxemia, initiated by vascular occlusion and exacerbated by maintenance of exercise, is a key element in the peripheral adaptations documented in blood flow restriction, triggering a cascade of signaling pathways involving neurohumoral factors in particular, with effects both locally (i.e. striated skeletal muscle) and remotely, on the myocardium among others. The feasibility and safety of blood flow restriction in heart failure patients has been well demonstrated. Left ventricle ejection fraction remains a very global functional index, with poor reproducibility influenced by cardiac load conditions, making it impossible to draw any conclusions as to possible improvements in myocardial function, linked to changes in intrinsic tissue decontractility/relaxation properties. New cardiac imaging techniques like Speckle Tracking Echography have made it possible to assess the effects of blood flow resistance on myocardial function but so far no studies have used these tools to compare the effects of BFR+resistance training and resistance training alone on myocardial function in heart failure patients. It is suggested that resistance training combined with blood flow resistance could further improve cardiac and muscular function compared with resistance training alone, by activating neurohumoral mediators, like certain micro ribonucleic acids.

Detailed description

Physical exercise is an essential part of cardiac rehabilitation for heart failure patients. In addition to aerobic training, resistance training is now recommended by scientific societies. Clinical studies report that resistance training contributes not only to peripheral reconditioning, with improved muscle mass and strength, but also to central reconditioning, with improved remodeling and cardiac function, thus reducing the exercise intolerance of heart failure patients. These favorable adaptations are achieved, however, on condition that RT is performed at moderate to high intensities (e.g. \>75-80% of maximal repetition), intensities that cannot always be sustained by the most fragile and deconditioned patients, such as those with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. The guidelines recommend intensities of 40% or less of repetition maximum. Blood flow restriction (BFR) by vascular occlusion training is an interesting alternative to conventional resistance training, particularly for these most deconditioned patients. Preclinical and clinical studies have clearly established that for low-intensity regimens (around 40% of maximal repetition, an intensity well tolerated by the most fragile patients), resistance training+BFR improves muscle strength and left ventricular function, unlike resistance training alone. Tissue hypoxemia, initiated by vascular occlusion and exacerbated by maintenance of exercise, is a key element in the peripheral adaptations documented in BFR, triggering the activation of a cascade of signaling pathways involving neurohumoral factors in particular, with effects both locally (i.e. striated skeletal muscle) and remotely, on the myocardium among others. The feasibility and safety (i.e. no reported adverse events) of BFR in heart failure patients has been well demonstrated. Left ventricular ejection fraction remains a very global functional index, with poor reproducibility and influenced by cardiac load conditions, making it impossible to draw any conclusions as to possible improvements in myocardial function, linked to changes in intrinsic tissue decontractility/relaxation properties. Innovative cardiac imaging techniques, such as Speckle Tracking Echography, now enable a detailed assessment of the effects of BFR on myocardial function. However, no study has yet used these tools to compare the effects of BFR+resistance training and resistance training alone on myocardial function in heart failure with reduced ejection patients. It is hypothetically suggested that resistance training combined with BFR could further improve cardiac and muscular function compared with resistance training alone, thanks to the activation of neurohumoral mediators, such as certain micro ribonucleic acids.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEApplication of a vascular restriction device during resistance trainingIn the BFR-RT group, sessions will consist of 30 repetitions, followed by 3 sets of 15 repetitions at 40% 1-MR (maximal repetition), interspersed with 60 sec of recovery. An arterial occlusion pressure of 50% of systolic pressure will be maintained constant using a digital tourniquet. The cuff will be deflated during the recovery phases. In the control group (RT group) it will be the same intervention with same intensities but without using BFR.

Timeline

Start date
2025-08-01
Primary completion
2027-08-01
Completion
2027-09-01
First posted
2025-08-12
Last updated
2025-08-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07118410. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.