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The goal of this interventional study is to compare muscle reflex function under settings of normoxia (normal oxygen level), acute hypoxia (brief oxygen-lack) and chronic hypoxia (long-duration exposure to oxygen-lack).
The main question is: Does the muscle reflex adapt to chronic hypoxia?
Young, healthy participants will complete light-to-high intensity cycling exercise with and without suppression of the muscle reflex. Suppression of the muscle reflex will be via spinal administration of the opioid Fentanyl. In the control condition, saline will be administered into the spinal space. Participants will complete control (saline) and experimental (Fentanyl) exercise conditions at sea-level (Kelowna, BC, Canada) breathing room air and whilst breathing a lower fraction of oxygen (acute hypoxia). Thereafter, participants will complete the exercise test after living at high altitude (White Mountain, CA, USA) for 2 weeks whilst breathing room air (chronic hypoxia) and breathing a higher fraction of oxygen (restored normoxia).
Full description
Purpose:
To determine whether muscle reflex control of cardiorespiratory function is sensitized by chronic exposure to low oxygen environments. To do this, fentanyl will be administered into the lumbar spine to suppress nerve activity coming from the muscle during upright cycling exercise.
Hypothesis:
Cardiorespiratory responses (ventilation, blood pressure and heart rate) to cycling exercise will be suppressed when muscle reflex activity is partially blocked with fentanyl administration. This suppression will be augmented in a dose-dependent manner with the duration of hypoxic exposure.
Design:
This is a repeated measures cross-over design with participants completing control (saline) and experimental (fentanyl) conditions both low and high altitude; a total of six visits is required. Sea level testing sessions will involve a cycling exercise bout while breathing room air and a second exercise bout breathing a hypoxic gas mixture meant to simulate the altitude at White Mountain. High altitude testing sessions will involve the same cycling exercise bout while breathing room air and another exercise bout while breathing a hyperoxic gas mixture meant to simulate the altitude in Kelowna. Cardiorespiratory (ventilation, blood pressure and heart rate) will be measured throughout with (fentanyl) and without (saline) muscle reflex suppression. A 7-km time trial test will be performed during each visit to determine how the muscle reflex influences exercise performance.
Experimental procedures:
Participants will visit the lab on six occasions; 3 in both Kelowna and White Mountain. Participants will be requested to practice regular exercise and dietary habits that can be easily replicated in the 24 hours prior to every laboratory visit. Exercise and dietary patterns will be documented during the first visit and thereafter the participants will be reminded of these practices and instructed to match them as closely as possible in the 24 hours leading up to all subsequent visits. Participants will only be instructed to avoid heavy exercise in the 12 hours prior to testing sessions. On the first visit (Kelowna), participants will be introduced into the lab, where we will give oral and written instruction detailing the procedures and associated risks related to participating. Details of the experimental visits are outlined below:
Sea level:
After a 2 min wash-in, complete four steady-state exercise bouts (3 min each) while breathing hypoxic gas (FiO2 = 0.15).
Complete a 7 km time trial test. - Main Experimental visit #2, Intrathecal (spinal) saline or fentanyl (2 h) Complete identical procedures as experimental visit #1, but the opposite condition.
High altitude:
After a 2 min wash-in, complete four steady-state exercise bouts (3 min each) while breathing hyperoxic gas (FiO2 = 0.30).
Complete a 7 km time trial test.
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All potential participants will be screened by a physician to identify co-morbidities
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14 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Philip N Ainslie, PhD; Travis D Gibbons, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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