Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Breathing Maneuvers and Oxygen Administration on Myocardial Oxygenation in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease Compared With Healthy Controls - Non-invasive Assessment With Oxygenation-sensitive Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging (OS-CMR)
Patients with an impaired blood supply of the heart routinely receive oxygen in order to improve or preserve the oxygen supply of the heart muscle in acute cardiac care. In recent studies a new innovative MRI-technique that can detect changes in oxygen supply of the heart was able to show that the administration of oxygen or fast breathing can decrease the blood supply of the arteries supplying the heart muscle with oxygen. Thus, the administration of oxygen may paradoxically impair the oxygen supply of the heart muscle. In this study the investigators want to investigate, whether the administration of exogenous oxygen via a mask alone and in combination with fast breathing leads to a decrease in oxygen supply in regions with already impaired blood supply by a narrowing of a coronary artery of the heart.
Background
Patients with acute myocardial ischemia receive oxygen as a standard measure of care to
maintain or improve the myocardial oxygen supply. In 1975 Neil et al. were able to show that
higher oxygen concentration reduces myocardial blood flow. However, since the oxygen
concentration in the blood was significantly increased it was/is assumed that the higher
oxygen supply outweighs the decrease in perfusion. Oxygenation-Sensitive (OS) Cardiovascular
Magnetic Resonance (CMR) is a newer technology that uses the paramagnetic deoxyhemoglobin in
the blood as an endogenous contrast. An drop in tissue oxygenation (drop in oxyhemoglobin)
results in an increase in deoxyhemoglobin, which results in an drop in SI in OS-images. Vice
versa an increase in tissue oxygenation results in an increase in OS-SI. Therefore, OS-CMR
can assess myocardial tissue oxygenation changes non-invasively, free of contrast and free of
radiation. While other diagnostic modalities only give information on myocardial oxygenation
with surrogate parameters that may indicate ischemia OS-CMR gives local functional
information of the myocardial oxygen supply. Studies have been performed using OS-CMR for the
detection of coronary artery disease. More recently breathing maneuvers that change systemic
blood gases have been suggested as a vasoactive stimulus to detect coronary artery disease
and measure changes to the myocardial oxygen supply. Guensch et al. were able to show that
hypercapnia and the combination of hypercapnia and hypoxia lead to a increase of myocardial
oxygenation that can only be explained by an increase blood flow. However, hypocapnia
resulted in a decrease in myocardial oxygenation in healthy volunteers. In a porcine model
the investigators were able to show that the increase in systemic oxygen supply resulted in a
decrease in myocardial blood flow in healthy and swine with an acute coronary artery
stenosis, but a decrease in myocardial oxygenation was only observed in the animals with a
coronary artery stenosis (Abstract Guensch et al: Administration of exogenous oxygen may
worsen myocardial ischemia, ESC 2014, accepted). The impact of hyperoxia as well as
hypocapnia and hypercapnia in humans with a chronic coronary artery disease is poorly
investigated. As the administration of oxygen is part of the treating guidelines in acute
myocardial ischemia and in certain situations (e.g. anesthesia) higher oxygen concentrations
are maintained for safety reasons, it is important to further investigate the role of higher
oxygen concentrations in coronary artery disease. Further the investigators want to shed
light on transient states of hypocapnia and hypercapnia induced by voluntary breathing.
Because OS-CMR is a safe diagnostic tool (no radiation, no contrast, no pharmacologic
vasodilator required) and can give insight on the oxygenation changes of the heart is it
ideal to test the hypothesis. Therefore the investigators want to invite patients with a
known coronary stenosis (confirmed by previous coronary angiography) scheduled for a
percutaneous coronary intervention (staged PCI) or coronary artery bypass surgery to
participate in this study prior to the intervention and compare the MRI results to healthy
volunteers. All participants will perform hyperventilation with a consecutive breath-hold as
well as inhale oxygen for 3-5 minutes while the breathing maneuver is being repeated. For the
patients the results will then be compared to the findings of coronary angiography (QCA,
reduction in lumen-diameter of the vessel).
Objective
With this study the investigators want to investigate whether the administration of oxygen,
as well as performing breathing maneuvers (hyperventilation, breath-holding) have a negative
or positive effect on the oxygenation of myocardium subtended to arteries diseased of
coronary artery disease, as opposed to healthy subjects.
Methods
CAD-patients with a known coronary pathology that are scheduled for a PCI or coronary bypass
surgery will be recruited for the CMR exam prior to the coronary intervention. A i.v. line
will be placed for safety reason. During short breath-holds oxygenation-sensitive baseline
images and cardiac function images will be acquired. The subjects will then be asked to
hyperventilate for one minute with 20-30 breaths/min. Immediately after a maximal breath-hold
will be performed in end-expiration as long as the subject can comfortably bear. During the
entire breath-hold oxygenation sensitive images will be recorded. Whenever the subject feels
the need to breath, he/she can immediately do so and signal the technician with a call bell.
After recovery the subject will breath oxygen 12-15L/min through a mask for 3-5 min after
which oxygenation sensitive images as well as function images will be repeated. The
hyperventilation-breath-hold will be repeated with oxygen. Healthy volunteers will undergo
the same protocol.
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