Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The central hypothesis in the present project is that general anesthesia may alter autonomic control such that perioperative coronary blood flow (CBF) is significantly disturbed.

These disturbances in coronary blood flow may contribute to the development of myocardial ischemia in the perioperative period. Furthermore, patients with an intrinsically altered autonomic sympathetic innervation, like diabetics, are even more prone to develop perioperative disturbances in coronary blood flow.

Here the researchers will investigate what the direct effects are of general and locoregional anesthesia on the CBF. Furthermore, the researchers aim to evaluate whether diabetic subjects show more disturbed CBF responses to anesthesia as compared to non-diabetics.


Clinical Trial Description

In response to intraoperative stress, increased autonomic sympathetic activity may alter myocardial oxygen demand. Under normal physiological circumstances, sympathetic stimulation increases myocardial blood flow via adrenergic coronary vasodilation. However, coronary vessels contain both α- and β-adrenoreceptors, and if the coronary circulation is impaired due to cardiovascular disease, unopposed adrenergic coronary vasoconstriction may contribute to ischemia. Anesthetics reduce both coronary blood flow (CBF) regulation and the sympathetic autonomic nervous activity. However, it is unclear whether anesthetic-related reductions in CBF are a result of inhibited autonomic sympathetic innervation. Data regarding alterations in myocardial blood flow in response to sympathetic stimulation during anesthesia provide conflicting results. Moffitt and Sethna showed in patients undergoing cardiac surgery that CBF decreased during sternotomy-induced sympathetic stimulation, whereas Kirno et al. showed an increase in coronary blood flow after sternotomy. To our best knowledge, coronary vascular responses to sympathetic stimulation in anesthetized healthy humans are lacking because of absence of reliable non-invasive measurement of myocardial blood flow. The introduction of non-invasive contrast-echocardiographic techniques that allow evaluation of regional myocardial blood flow enable evaluation of the relation between autonomic control and CBF during anesthesia.

Cardiac complications like myocardial ischemia remain one of the main causes of perioperative morbidity and mortality. Interestingly, the presence of cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy (CAN) strongly predicts abnormalities in myocardial perfusion and impaired coronary vasodilator responses to stress. This implies that symptoms of CAN, like resting tachycardia, orthostasis and alterations in heart rate variability may predict the degree of impairment of CBF regulation. Indeed, autonomic neuropathy as determined by heart rate variability predicted mortality in patients with coronary artery disease undergoing non-cardiac surgery, but the contribution of impaired coronary vasodilatory responses to these results has not been established. Clarification of the relation between autonomic control and CBF during anesthesia may not only contribute to our insight in pro-ischemic processes in the heart, but may lead to changes in preoperative assessment of patients at risk for perioperative ischemia, thereby reducing perioperative complications. ;


Study Design

Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00866801
Study type Observational
Source VU University Medical Center
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 2009
Completion date October 2014

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06052553 - A Study of TopSpin360 Training Device N/A
Completed NCT05511077 - Biomarkers of Oat Product Intake: The BiOAT Marker Study N/A
Recruiting NCT04632485 - Early Detection of Vascular Dysfunction Using Biomarkers From Lagrangian Carotid Strain Imaging
Completed NCT05931237 - Cranberry Flavan-3-ols Consumption and Gut Microbiota in Healthy Adults N/A
Terminated NCT04556032 - Effects of Ergothioneine on Cognition, Mood, and Sleep in Healthy Adult Men and Women N/A
Completed NCT04527718 - Study of the Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics of 611 in Adult Healthy Volunteers Phase 1
Completed NCT04065295 - A Study to Test How Well Healthy Men Tolerate Different Doses of BI 1356225 Phase 1
Completed NCT04998695 - Health Effects of Consuming Olive Pomace Oil N/A
Completed NCT04107441 - AX-8 Drug Safety, Tolerability and Plasma Levels in Healthy Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT01442831 - Evaluate the Absorption, Metabolism, And Excretion Of Orally Administered [14C] TR 701 In Healthy Adult Male Subjects Phase 1
Terminated NCT05934942 - A Study in Healthy Women to Test Whether BI 1358894 Influences the Amount of a Contraceptive in the Blood Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05525845 - Studying the Hedonic and Homeostatic Regulation of Food Intake Using Functional MRI N/A
Completed NCT05515328 - A Study in Healthy Men to Test How BI 685509 is Processed in the Body Phase 1
Completed NCT05030857 - Drug-drug Interaction and Food-effect Study With GLPG4716 and Midazolam in Healthy Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT04967157 - Cognitive Effects of Citicoline on Attention in Healthy Men and Women N/A
Recruiting NCT04494269 - A Study to Evaluate Pharmacokinetics and Safety of Tegoprazan in Subjects With Hepatic Impairment and Healthy Controls Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04714294 - Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics Characteristics of HPP737 in Healthy Volunteers Phase 1
Completed NCT04539756 - Writing Activities and Emotions N/A
Recruiting NCT04098510 - Concentration of MitoQ in Human Skeletal Muscle N/A
Completed NCT03308110 - Bioavailability and Food Effect Study of Two Formulations of PF-06650833 Phase 1