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RECRUITING
NCT06842784

Impact of Extreme Heat on Myocardial Blood Flow and Flow Reserve in Young and Older Adults

Sponsor: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Extreme heat causes a disproportionate number of hospitalizations and deaths in older adults relative to any other age group. Importantly, many hospitalizations and deaths are primarily due to cardiovascular events such as myocardial infarction. Previous data indicate that older adults have attenuated skin blood flow and sweating responses when exposed to heat, resulting greater increase in core body temperature. Despite these observations, relatively little is known about the risk for myocardial ischemia potentially contributing to the aforementioned higher morbidity and mortality in older adults during heat waves. The broad objective of this work is to determine the impact of ambient heat exposure on myocardial blood flow and flow reserve in young and older adults. Aim 1 will test the hypothesis that older adults exhibit attenuated myocardial flow reserve compared to young adults during heat stress. Aim 2 will determine if the percent of maximal myocardial flow reserve (assess via vasodilator stress) during heat exposure is higher in older adults compared to young adults. The expected outcome from this body of work will improve our understanding of the consequences of aging on cardiovascular responses to ambient heat stress.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

24

Start Date

2025-02-03

Completion Date

2027-02-01

Last Updated

2025-02-24

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

OTHER

Ambient heat stress

3-hour ambient heating in 44°C and 20% relative humidity

Locations (1)

Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas

Dallas, Texas, United States