Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
RECRUITING
NCT05633693
NA

Postural Sway and Counterpressure Maneuvers for Pediatric Syncope

Sponsor: Simon Fraser University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The investigators are interested in whether discrete counterpressure maneuvers, or muscle movements in the lower body, will boost blood pressure and cardiovascular control in children who faint. We will record cardiovascular responses to maneuvers of exaggerated sway, leg crossing, crouching, and gluteal muscle tensing in children who faint (N=20), as well as their height, weight, muscularity, and pubertal (Tanner) stage. Autonomic cardiovascular control will be measured using a Valsalva manoeuvre (expiration against a closed airway for 20 seconds) and a supine-stand test. The primary outcomes are noninvasive measures of cardiovascular responses to the maneuvers (blood pressure, cerebral blood flow, and stroke volume (volume of blood pumped per heartbeat). Comparisons will be made across levels of sex, diagnosis, Tanner stage, muscularity, height, and degree of autonomic control.

Official title: Impact of Postural Sway on Cardiovascular Control in Pediatric Patients With Syncope

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

6 Years - 18 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2023-04-17

Completion Date

2025-06

Last Updated

2024-11-29

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Counterpressure Maneuvers

Movements that can aid in delaying or preventing syncope by recruiting skeletal muscle pumping (via compression of major veins by contracting muscle to eject blood through cardiovascular circuit) and increased sympathetic drive (via sustaining an isometric muscle contraction). In this trial, we will be evaluating two clinically recommended isometric maneuvers (crouching, and leg crossing with muscle tensing) and two novel dynamic maneuvers that comprise discrete movement that the investigators have identified in prior work (exaggerated anterior-posterior postural sway, rhythmic gluteal clenching).

BEHAVIORAL

Baseline Stand

Participants will stand quietly for 5-minutes on a force platform to allow the investigators to assess their typical response to orthostasis.

Locations (1)

Simon Fraser University

Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada