The investigators' hypothesis is that dysregulation of autonomic function, as revealed during a simulated dive reflex, may result in an attenuation of the heart rate response to a greater degree in asthmatics who collapse during exacerbations of asthma than that seen in healthy individuals and in asthmatics without a history of syncope. The investigators will test this by assessing autonomic function through a dive reflex protocol.
Tests of autonomic function are notoriously difficult to evaluate. Here the investigators required a well validated test of the dynamic cardiovascular response to an abrupt stimulus and considered the diving reflex the most reliable and practical. In man, the diving reflex acts as a vestigial reflex aimed at conserving oxygen storage during apnoeic facial immersion. Facial immersion activates a vagally-induced bradycardia and a sympathetically activated alpha-adrenergic peripheral vasoconstriction and hypertension. There are two triggers of the diving reflex, facial immersion in water and breath hold, both of which can impact on heart rate attenuation. Facial immersion can be further delineated into exposure to cold, wetness and pressure.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
24
All subjects undergo simulated dive reflex, with 30s facial immersion and continuous HR and BP monitoring with Nexfin over a period of 6 minutes.
Hull Clinical Trials Unit, Respiratory academic department
Cottingham, Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Change in heart rate from baseline
Nexfin and ECG monitoring continuously measuring subject heart rate during dive protocol, over a period of 6 minutes. Beat to beat data is converted into mean HR per 10-second epoch and compared to a baseline value for each subject.
Time frame: 2 minutes prior to facial immersion in water and in 10 second epochs continuously until 3 minutes after facial immersion
Change in blood pressure from baseline
Nexfin monitoring continuously measuring subject blood pressure (systolic, diastolic and mean arterial pressure) during dive protocol, over a period of 6 minutes. Beat to beat data is converted into mean blood pressure values per 10-second epoch and compared to a baseline value for each subject
Time frame: 2 minutes before facial immersion and continuously throughout dive protocol, over a period of 6 minutes
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