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Clinical Trial Summary

What problems limit patients' response to exercise? Using exercise cardiac magnetic resonance imaging to assess the heart's response, with simultaneous measurement of respiratory oxygen and carbon dioxide levels to assess the lung and skeletal muscle responses, to identify the rate-limiting factors affecting different types of patient


Clinical Trial Description

Background and study aims Many medical conditions that affect the heart and lungs can cause breathlessness. People affected by breathlessness often require a number of tests to diagnose the medical condition responsible for their symptoms. Cardiac MRI (magnetic resonance) scanning is already used to help diagnose and monitor patients with heart conditions (for example cardiomyopathy and pulmonary hypertension). By exercising while having an MRI scan, and at the same time measuring the gases breathed in and out from the air, it will be possible to more accurately understand the changes that occur in the heart, lungs and muscles. The purpose of this study is to develop our understanding of the cardiovascular response to exercise in patients with non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy. Who can participate? Patients aged 18 - 80 years with symptoms of breathlessness on exertion, and under the care of cardiology, pulmonary hypertension or rheumatology clinics for non-ischaemic cardiovascular disease. What does the study involve? Participants will be invited to an appointment at the cardiovascular MRI department at the Royal Free Hospital. On the day of the appointment, participants will be welcomed to the department by the research team and the researchers will check that participants are well enough to exercise and safe to have an MRI scan. There will be an opportunity to ask any further questions. The researchers will ask participants to perform exercise in one of three ways: 1. Using our special MRI safe exercise bike: The researchers will show participants how to use this and then the researchers will help participants to get on it and into the MRI scanner. 2. Lifting a weight using their arms: The researchers will check how much weight participants would be expected to manage before participants enter the scanner. The researchers will ask participants to lift and hold a weight using their dominant arm during the scan. 3. Stepping one (or both) leg(s) using an elastic resistance band. The researchers will measure the band so it is of the appropriate length for participants, and the researchers will show participants how to perform the exercise when in the scanner. The researchers will give participants a special face mask to wear to measure the concentration of gases in exhaled breath (like carbon dioxide or oxygen) and breathing volumes. Most adults and children find the face mask comfortable and easy to wear. The researchers will give participants a head-set so that participants can communicate at all times with the person running the scan. First participants will have a MRI scan where the researchers ask participants to lie back and relax (this will take about 30 minutes). Then the researchers will ask participants to exercise on the MRI safe bike for about 7 minutes, lift the weight for about 3 minutes, or perform leg stepping for about 3 minutes whilst participants are having continuous MRI scanning. After the scan, the researchers will help participants out of the scanner. What are the possible benefits and risks of participating? There are no individual benefits to taking part. The researchers hope that information from this study will help improve the understanding and treatment of heart conditions that can limit exercise ability. If participants like the researchers can make participants a copy of their scan on CD to keep. Sometimes the researchers might find new information that the researchers need to tell their treating doctor straight away. If the researchers do find such information the researchers will let participants and their doctor know as soon as possible. The researchers will reimburse reasonable travel expenses for participants to attend the research scan (unless participants are already scheduled to have a clinical visit on the same day). MRI scanning is very safe. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04729777
Study type Observational
Source Royal Free Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Contact James Brown
Phone +44 (0)2074332780
Email james.brown1@nhs.net
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date March 1, 2019
Completion date October 1, 2021

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