People with cardiovascular risk (CV) factors (obesity, diabetes, etc...) or established heart disease (such as coronary heart disease or chronic heart failure) often have cognitive dysfunction as compared to people without CV risk factors or heart disease. Among the mechanisms, a reduced cardiac output and cerebral blood flow in those people have been suggested. The aim of this study was to compare resting cognitive function, maximal cardiopulmonary function, cardiac output and cerebral hemodynamics during exercise in patients with metabolic syndrome, coronary heart disease, or heart failure vs. healthy subjects.
All subjects will underwent a baseline evaluation including a medical history, physical examination with measurement of height and weight, body composition and fasting blood sample. All subjects will performed a cognitive testing at rest and a maximal cardiopulmonary exercise test (CEPT) with gas exchange analysis. During CEPT, cerebral oxygenation (measured by near-infra red spectroscopy) and cardiac hemodynamics responses (impedance cardiography) will be measured continuously.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
140
Maximal cardiopulmonary test Rest cognitive testing
Cerebral hemodynamics measured with near-infra red spectroscopy (NIRS)
Total haemoglobin (ΔtHb): index of brain perfusion (in µM) measured during maximal exercise test.
Time frame: Measured within 2 weeks
Resting cognitive function (assessed by the battery test)
Resting cognitive function : will be evaluated by a validated paper-and-pencil full neuropsychological battery test that include: - D-KEFS Color-Word Interference Stroop test : time (sec.)
Time frame: Measured within 2 weeks
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