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Effect of Glucose on Ocular Blood Flow

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University Hospital Basel

Status

Completed

Conditions

Coronary Vasospasm

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00350129
005-ZAC-2004-002

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary objective is to assess the effect of glucose on retinal vascular diameter in otherwise healthy vasospastic subjects compared to non-vasospastic controls.

The secondary objective is to compare the effect of glucose also on choroidal blood flow in otherwise healthy vasospastic subjects with non-vasospastic controls.

Full description

It is known that a glucose load can induce an increase in ocular blood flow. Acute hyperglycemia increases retinal vessel diameters in animals and humans. The purpose of this study is to compare the effect of glucose on the ocular blood flow in vasospastics and nonvasospastics. Body core temperature depends on basal metabolism. Peripheral vasoconstriction is a physiological way to preserve core temperature of the body. The etiology of primary vasospastic syndrome is unknown and potentially represents simply a reaction to a defective metabolism. Based on this hypothesis, vasospastics are expected to show a different vascular reaction to glucose.

On both study days, after an overnight fast, the subjects will be seated for 30 minutes in the Lab and local tropicamide will be applied for pupil dilatation. After stabilisation of blood pressure Retinal vessel diameter and choroidal blood flow will be assessed. Baseline blood glucose levels will be measured. Afterwards study substance (75 gram of Glucose or Aspartate) will be applied in 3 dl of water. One and a half hour later, the vascular measurements will be repeated. Ath the end of hemodynamic assessments, blood sugar level will be measured again.

Enrollment

24 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • No history of the following problems: ocular or systemic disease; chronic or current systemic or topical medication; or of drug or alcohol abuse
  • normal blood pressure (100-140 / 60-90 mmhg)
  • best corrected visual acuity above 20/25 in both eyes
  • no pathological findings upon a slit-lamp examination and indirect fundoscopy
  • ametropia within -3 to +3 diopters of spherical equivalent
  • less than 1 diopter astigmatism
  • IOP < 20 mmHg in both eyes
  • Subjects will be classified as vasospastic if they relate a clear history of frequent cold hands (answering yes to the questions: "do you have always cold hands, even during summer time?" and "do other people tell you that you have cold hands?") and as normals if they deny such a history
  • Vasospastic propensity will also be assessed by capillaroscopy

Exclusion criteria

  • Subjects describing "sometimes cold hands"
  • if the test substance cannot be ingested
  • not obtainable ocular blood flow measurements
  • abnormally high levels of glucose at any point in time

Trial design

24 participants in 2 patient groups

1
Description:
healthy vasospastic subjects
2
Description:
healthy non-vasospastic subjects

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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