The study is a pharmacodynamic random order cross-over trial investigating the physiological effects of intra-arterial infusion of nitrite following a haemolysed autologous blood transfusion.
This is a healthy volunteer study. Following entry into this cross-over trial, participants will be randomized to undergo experiments under either normoxic followed by hypoxic conditions, or hypoxic followed by normoxic conditions. Subjects will donate whole blood as an autologous unit at a preselected NHSBT donation site. The unit will transported back to the NNUH blood bank after a minimum of 30 days (maximum 35 days) after donation. Volunteers will be tested for baseline bloods. Volunteers will be randomised to normoxia or hypoxia. The will then undergo a nitrite infusion, followed by an autologous whole blood transfusion and a second nitrite infusion (which will co-infuse at the end of the transfusion). During the protocol, the participants will undergo repeated FBFR measurements using strain-gauge plethysmography. After a minimum of 12 weeks rest period after their initial donation, participants will cross-over to the opposite oxygen condition (as per initial randomization) and the above protocol will be repeated. All interventions will be performed by fully trained and competent medical staff.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
41
University of East Anglia
Norwich, Norfolk, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGChange in FBFR during intra-brachial nitrite and haemolysed blood co-infusion in normoxia vs hypoxia.
Time frame: Up to 18 months
Change in FBFR during haemolysed blood infusion vs baseline
Time frame: Up to 18 months
Change in FBFR during nitrite infusion in normoxia vs nitrite infusion in hypoxia
Time frame: Up to 18 months
Change in FBFR during nitrite infusion in normoxia vs baseline
Time frame: Up to 18 months
Change in FBFR during nitrite infusion in hypoxia vs baseline
Time frame: Up to 18 months
Blood analysis (cell free haemoglobin, nitrate, nitrite and nitroso species levels)
Time frame: Up to 18 months
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