Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
CPOD Patient's Tolerance of Intermittent Exercise With Inter-exercise Recovery Under Normoxic Hypoxia
Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens
Summary
Exercise retraining improves the prognosis and quality of life of patients with chronic lung or circulatory diseases. However, exercise intolerance may be caused by excessive ventilatory. Exposure to oxygen-replete air reduces this ventilatory overload, improves sleep and enhances responses to exercise. This study examine the impact of the acute manipulation of oxygen availability during inter-exercise recovery period of an intermittent cycling exercise on perceptual responses. this randomized, controlled, study include adult patient with COPD. On separate days, 50 patients with COPD completed four sets of 4-min at 85% of VO2peak intercept by 3-min of passive recovery in two randomized between-sets recovery conditions. Rating exertion perception, gaz exchanges, heart rate, sleep quality and nocturnal heart rate variability were assessed. Hypoxic exposure during inter-repetition recovery phases would reduce the ventilatory load during exercise. What's more, patients would not be forced to perform the sporting gesture in a restricted space or wearing a mask, limiting dyspnea and the perceived difficulty of the effort. Lastly, the induction of hypoxic stress during the re-training session helped to improve patients' sleep.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
40 Years - 60 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2025-10
Completion Date
2027-08
Last Updated
2025-10-01
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Normobaric hypoxia
Normobaric hypoxia (inspired oxygen fraction of 12.9%) applied between-sets recovery periods
normoxic condition
Between-sets recovery periods under normoxic condition
Locations (1)
CHRU Amiens
Amiens, France