View clinical trials related to Exercise Tolerance.
Filter by:Aim of this prospective, interventional, single-center, randomized study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intermittent hypoxic-hyperoxic training (IHHT) as a rehabilitation method in patients with cardiovascular pathology in the early period after coronavirus infection. The study will include 60 patients with cardiovascular pathology who underwent confirmed by laboratory tests COVID-19 infection 1-3 months ago with the degree of lung lesion CT3, CT4, who were admitted to the University Clinical Hospital No. 4 of I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University. The patients will be divided into 2 groups (intervention and control groups). Intervention group will inhale hypoxic gas mixtures (10-12% O2) followed by exposure to a hyperoxic gas mixture with 30-35% O2 5 times a week for 3 weeks, while control group will undergo a simulated IHHT. All the patients will undergo identical laboratory and instrumental testing before IHHT, after the last IHHT procedure, in a month after the last IHHT procedure and in 6 months. Estimated result of the study is to confirm or refute the hypothesis of the study that a three-week course of IHHT in patients with cardiovascular pathology in the early period after coronavirus infection can improve exercise tolerance, as well as the quality of life and psychoemotional status, and affect the dynamics of laboratory and instrumental parameters.
Treatment of hookworm infected groups with albendazole has been shown to result in an increase in hemoglobin levels and a related decrease in the prevalence of anemia. Increases in hemoglobin levels due to treatment have been associated with significant gains in adult labor productivity. In this study, the investigators hypothesize that regular treatment of women smallholder farmers in a high prevalence area with the anti-hookworm drug albendazole and iron supplementation will improve hookworm associated anemia. Further, regular treatment of albendazole and iron supplementation will improve their work capacity when compared to a control group
Chronotropic incompetence consists of an insufficient increase in heart rate during effort, and its presence is recognized as a common feature in patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction, apparently suggesting a worse prognosis. Little is known about the possible benefits of its reversal in such patients. The investigators working hypothesis is that the modulation of chronotropic response, as obtained by means of atrial rate-adaptive pacing may improve functional capacity in persons with chronic heart failure and chronotropic incompetence. To explore this hypothesis,the investigators will enroll 20 patients with NYHA II/III heart failure, low left ventricular ejection fraction (<40%) and chronotropic incompetence (Maximal heart rate <80% of predicted value in a symptom-limited incremental test), who already underwent implantation of dual-chamber implantable defibrillator for prevention of sudden cardiac death. The study will have a randomized, double-blind, cross-over design. The procedures, to be carried out at one month from each reprogramming (VVI backup pacing vs. AAI-R "active" pacing), will comprise: blood sampling for NT-proBNP, incremental symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX), constant-workload cardiopulmonary test (50% of max WR), quality-of-life questionnaire, 24-hour ECG monitoring. The primary end-point will be peak oxygen consumption on CPX. Secondary end-points will include acute response to reprogramming, and data derived from constant-WR tests, Holter monitoring and QoL.