Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Breathing Helium-Hyperoxia Increase the Tolerance of One-Legged Exercise in Ventilatory Limited Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Regular exercise can help patients with the lung disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). But COPD patients have a hard time with training because of their breathing. To improve their program they can train with one leg at a time. Another way is to make their exercise easier by breathing helium. Putting two methods, one-legged and helium, together may improve their program even more. This project is planned to assess whether breathing helium improves their one-legged exercise endurance. If it does, then there may be a reason for combining one-legged exercise with breathing helium as part of their respiratory rehabilitation program. The aim of this study is to determine whether breathing helium-hyperoxia enables a further increase in the constant power endurance time during one-legged exercise in ventilatory limited subjects with COPD. The null hypothesis is that patients will have sufficient peripheral muscle limitation that ventilatory unloading using helium-hyperoxia will be of no additional benefit to exercise tolerance. The investigators hypothesize that patients with COPD are so ventilatory limited relative to their peripheral muscles that helium-hyperoxia will improve their exercise endurance.
This is a randomized cross-over comparison trial determining the effects of helium-hyperoxia
on the performance of muscle specific one-legged cycling. Each participant will complete two
constant power exercise tests while cycling with their right leg only. The tests will be
separated by at least 24 h. The conditions of the two tests will be the same except that, in
randomized order, the participant will breathe helium-hyperoxia (40% O2, 60% He) through a
mask, or room air unencumbered by a mask with supplemental oxygen (4 L/min) provided by
nasal cannula.
Participants will perform three exercise tests. First they will complete one incremental
power exercise test using both legs (exercise capacity) in a standardized manner. Then they
will complete two constant power (exercise endurance) cycle ergometer tests to the limit of
tolerance (symptom based); the intent is to set an exercise level that comparable to the
ideal training session that a patient would experience in the respiratory rehabilitation
program. The same exercise regimen will be used in these two sessions except that the
participant will breathe helium-hyperoxia (40% O2, 60% He) in one session and room air, with
supplemental oxygen (4 L/min) provided by nasal cannula, in the other. During all exercise
sessions, heart rate, SaO2, and Borg scale ratings of dyspnoea and leg fatigue will be
monitored. For each exercise test, participants will adhere to their usual medical regimens,
not eat for 2 h before the test and not drink caffeinated beverages for 2 h before the test.
All tests will be separated by at least 24 h.
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Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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