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The study objectives of this projects are to examine the hypothesis that the sympathetic and blood pressure responses to exercise will be attenuated during and after heat exposure in patients with peripheral artery disease, via altering the sensitivity of the muscle afferent receptors.
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) affects 8-12 million Americans and its cardinal symptom is leg pain during exercise, termed "intermittent claudication". The diagnosis of PAD involves measuring the ankle-brachial index (ABI, i.e. the systolic pressure in the ankle divided by the systolic pressure in the arm); values below 0.9 are indicative of large vessel obstruction. Intermittent claudication is the most common symptom of this disease and it regularly occurs during exercise/physical activity but is relieved promptly by rest. Previous studies suggest that as the exercise pressor reflex is activated in patients with PAD, BP and heart rate (HR) are exaggerated. The BP rises during walking in the PAD patients were significantly greater than that seen in healthy control subjects. A recent human study from our group further indicates that an early BP response occurred during plantar flexion exercise before claudication was noted by the subjects, which may suggest that the accentuated BP response was due to an augmented muscle mechanoreflex in PAD. Moreover, another recent study from our group also showed that PAD patients have augmented renal vasoconstriction during plantar flexion exercise.
It has been shown that exercise has benefits for patients with PAD. However, exercise becomes limited due to the pain and fatigue associated with the disease. Moreover, the augmented pressor response to exercise in PAD may increase the risk for the end organ damage (e.g. brain and/or heart). Thus, finding alternate/complimentary interventions that modulate the cardiovascular system and autonomic nervous system, and can be tolerated by the patients, would be beneficial.
One possible intervention is heat exposure, since acute bouts of exercise and acute heat exposure have similar acute effects on both the autonomic and cardiovascular systems. For example, both exercise and heat exposure increase body temperature, increase HR, increase cardiac output (CO), increase left ventricular ejection fraction (EF), and enhance myocardial function. In the peripheral circulation, both exercise and heat exposure increase limb blood flow , muscle blood flow, and skin blood flow. Moreover, recent studies suggest that whole body exposure improves the endothelium function in PAD patients (e.g. activates endothelial progenitor cells CD34+).
However, the effect of heat treatment on the ability of walking of PAD patients has not been examined. Moreover, it is unknown if heating can normalize/decrease the accentuated the pressor responses to exercise in PAD patients.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAD without heating | Placebo Comparator | Subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
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| PAD warm bath | Experimental | Subjects will take a warm bath. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
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| PAD neutral bath | Placebo Comparator | Subjects will take a neutral bath. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
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| PAD heating suit | Experimental | Whole body heating with the suit will be performed. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Without Heating | Other | Subject will complete walking protocol without any heating procedure |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Walking time in minutes | Walking time on treadmill using Gardner protocol | Recording walking time to fatigue (up to 22 minutes maximum) during of every 3-4 hour study visit. |
| Blood pressure in mmHg | Cuffs placed on a finger and arm will monitor blood pressure. | Recorded continuously during the 3-4 hour study visit |
| Heart Rate in beats per minute | Electrocardiogram (ECG) patches attached to a Cardiocap will monitor heart rat | Recorded continuously during the 3-4 hour study visit |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Internal Temperature in degrees C | The internal temperature (Tcore) will be measured from the stomach/intestines via a telemetry pill swallowed by subjects. | Recorded continuously during the 3-4 hour study visit |
| Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) in arbitrary units |
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Inclusion Criteria:
All subjects
Patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD)
Healthy subjects
Exclusion Criteria:
For patients with PAD and Healthy subjects
For patients with PAD
For healthy subjects
• Any other chronic diseases (heart, lung, neuromuscular disease or diabetes)
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Jian Cui | Penn State College of Medicine | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center | Hershey | Pennsylvania | 17033 | United States |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 27763873 | Background | Cui J, Blaha C, Sinoway LI. Whole body heat stress attenuates the pressure response to muscle metaboreceptor stimulation in humans. J Appl Physiol (1985). 2016 Nov 1;121(5):1178-1186. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00212.2016. Epub 2016 Oct 7. | |
| 16873399 | Background | Cui J, Blaha C, Moradkhan R, Gray KS, Sinoway LI. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity responses to dynamic passive muscle stretch in humans. J Physiol. 2006 Oct 15;576(Pt 2):625-34. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.116640. Epub 2006 Jul 27. |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009043 | Motor Activity |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001519 | Behavior |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D006361 | Heating |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D004780 | Environment, Controlled |
| D004777 | Environment |
| D004778 | Environment and Public Health |
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The investigators will examine (using a prospective observational design) if heating will affect walking ability, blood pressure and heart rate responses in PAD patients. Each subject will serve as their own control. Additionally, we will compare these responses between PAD patients and healthy controls subjects.
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Subjects will be aware if they are being heated or not, but data analysis process is blinded.
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| PAD lower limb warm water immersion | Experimental | Subjects will place their lower legs in warm water. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
|
| Healthy subjects without heating | Placebo Comparator | Subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
|
| Healthy subjects warm bath | Experimental | Subjects will take a warm bath. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
|
| Healthy subjects neutral bath | Placebo Comparator | Subjects will take a neutral bath. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
|
| Healthy subjects heat suit | Experimental | Whole body heating with the suit will be performed. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
|
| Healthy subjects lower limb immersion | Experimental | Subjects will place their lower legs in warm water. Then, subjects will walk on a treadmill using the Gardner protocol until the patient says they want to stop. BP, HR and NIRS will be continuously measured during Gardner protocol. Skin blood flow, skin temperature and BP will be measured in the supine position before and after the Gardner protocol. |
|
| Warm Bath | Other | Subjects will sit in a warm bathtub with water up to their shoulders, while one arm will be out of water for BP and HR measurement. The water temperature and internal temperature (Tcore), BP and HR will be measured throughout the bath. The water temperature will be controlled between 38-41°C. Subjects will remain in the tub for ≤ 30 minutes. If the HR increases more than 15 -20 bpm, or a significant BP drop occurs (e.g. BP >20 mmHg), the subject will be removed from the bath even if the time is <30 min. |
|
| Neutral Bath | Other | Subjects will sit in a warm bathtub with water up to their shoulders, while one arm will be out of water for BP and HR measurement. The water temperature and internal temperature (Tcore), BP and HR will be measured throughout the bath. The water temperature will be controlled between 35 - 37°C. Subjects will remain in the tub for ≤ 30 minutes. |
|
| Heating Suit | Other | The mean skin temperature Tsk will be controlled with a water-perfused suit worn by subjects. Whole-body heating will be accomplished by perfusing warm water (~ 45 - 50 °C) through the suit to elevate the Tsk to ≤ 38 °C (100 oF). Warm water is through plastic tubes, and subjects' skin will not directly touch warm water. The heating will be continued until the ∆Tcore reaches ~ 0. 6 - 1.0 °C. This may take approximately 60 - 90 min. |
|
| Lower limb warm water immersion | Other | Subjects will sit on a chair and put their lower legs and feet in a bucket with warm water. The water level will be just below the knees (depth of approximately 40 cm). The water temperature will be monitored and controlled at ~38 - 42 °C throughout the 30 minutes. BP, HR, Tcore, the skin temperature and skin blood flow (e.g. on a thigh and/or forearm) will be measured before, during and after the lower limbs warm water immersion. |
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| Gardner walking protocol | Other | The Gardner protocol begins at 2 mph and 0% grade for 2 minutes. The grade increases by 2% every 2 minutes (the speed remains 2 mph) until the subject says they want to stop or 22 minutes maximum. BP and HR will also be measured throughout the protocol. |
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This system is designed specifically for non-invasive measurements of muscle tissue. The system measures the tissue saturation of the investigated muscle, called the 'tissue saturation index' (TSI). |
| Recorded continuously during the 3-4 hour study visit |
| 28330967 | Background | Cui J, Boehmer J, Blaha C, Sinoway LI. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity response to heat stress is attenuated in chronic heart failure patients. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2017 Jun 1;312(6):R873-R882. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00355.2016. Epub 2017 Mar 22. |
| 26265752 | Background | Cui J, Muller MD, Blaha C, Kunselman AR, Sinoway LI. Seasonal variation in muscle sympathetic nerve activity. Physiol Rep. 2015 Aug;3(8):e12492. doi: 10.14814/phy2.12492. |