Effect of Acute Hypoxia on RIght VEntRicular Function in Asthma.
Effect of Acute Hypoxia on RIght VEntRicular Function. A Single-Center, Double-Blind, Randomized Controlled Cross-Over Trial.
Mona Lichtblau
18 participants
May 26, 2026
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
More and more people are engaging in sports in the mountains, including individuals with heart or lung diseases. At the same time, such diseases are becoming more common in Switzerland. At high altitude, less oxygen is available, which places stress on the body-particularly on the heart, which has to pump blood through the lungs. How the heart, especially the right ventricle, in people with asthma responds to this stress is still not well understood. Therefore, this study investigates how the heart responds to simulated altitudes of 2,500 m and 4,000 m, both at rest and during light physical activity in patients with asthma. The primary objective is to assess how right ventricular function changes under conditions of reduced oxygen availability. In addition, vital signs, changes in blood gases, oxygen levels in blood and tissue and shortness of breath are assessed. The "altitude" is simulated using a special gas mixture that participants inhale. Participants undergo three altitude conditions (490, 2,500, and 4,000 m above sea level). The order of the altitude conditions is assigned at random. The aim is to better understand how the right ventricle and other parameters respond to low-oxygen conditions and how affected patients can be better supported in the future.
Eligibility
Plain Language Summary
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Interventions
Normobaric hypoxia according to 408m (control/normobaric normoxia), 2500 m and 4000 m above sea-level at rest for 1 hour and at low intensity cycling for 10 minutes (5 min 30 W, 5 min 60 W).
Locations(1)
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NCT07431580