MedPath

Inhaled Fentanyl Citrate & Dyspnea

Early Phase 1
Completed
Conditions
Dyspnea
Interventions
Other: CWS
Drug: Placebo
Registration Number
NCT01853449
Lead Sponsor
McGill University
Brief Summary

"Dyspnea" refers to the awareness of breathing discomfort that is typically experienced during exercise in health and disease. In various participant populations, dyspnea is a predictor of disability and death; and contributes to exercise intolerance and an adverse health-related quality-of-life. It follows that alleviating dyspnea and improving exercise tolerance are among the principal goals of disease management. Nevertheless, the effective management of dyspnea and activity-limitation remains an elusive goal for many healthcare providers and current strategies aimed at reversing the underlying chronic disease are only partially successful in this regard. Thus, research aimed at identifying dyspnea-specific medications to complement existing therapies for the management of exertional symptoms is timely and clinically relevant. The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that single-dose inhalation of fentanyl citrate (a mu-opioid receptor antagonist) will improve the perception of dyspnea during strenuous exercise in healthy, young men in the presence of an external thoracic restriction. To this end, the investigators plan compare the effects of inhaled 0.9% saline placebo and inhaled fentanyl citrate (250 mcg) on detailed assessments of neural respiratory drive (diaphragm EMG), ventilation, breathing pattern, dynamic operating lung volumes, contractile respiratory muscle function, cardio-metabolic function and dyspnea (sensory intensity and affective responses) during symptom-limited, high-intensity, constant-work-rate cycle exercise testing with and without external thoracic restriction in healthy, men aged 20-40 years.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Male
Target Recruitment
14
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male
  • Aged 20-40 years
  • FEV1 ≥80% predicted
  • FEV1/FVC >70%
Exclusion Criteria
  • Current or ex-smoker
  • Body Mass Index <18.5 or >30 kg/m2
  • History of cardiovascular, vascular, respiratory, renal, liver, musculoskeletal, endocrine, neuromuscular and/or metabolic disease/dysfunction
  • Taking doctor prescribed medications
  • History of using pain-relieving (opioid) and/or anti-depressant medications in the previous 6 weeks
  • Allergy to latex
  • Allergy to lidocaine or its "caine" derivatives

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
CWS+Fentanyl Citrate (250 mcg)Fentanyl CitrateChest wall strapping to reduce vital capacity by 20% of its baseline value + single-dose inhalation of nebulized fentanyl citrate (250 mcg)
CWS+Fentanyl Citrate (250 mcg)CWSChest wall strapping to reduce vital capacity by 20% of its baseline value + single-dose inhalation of nebulized fentanyl citrate (250 mcg)
CWS+0.9% saline placeboCWSChest wall strapping to reduce vital capacity by 20% of its baseline value + single-dose inhalation of 0.9% saline placebo
CWS+0.9% saline placeboPlaceboChest wall strapping to reduce vital capacity by 20% of its baseline value + single-dose inhalation of 0.9% saline placebo
No CWS+0.9% saline placeboPlaceboNo chest wall strapping (unloaded control) + single-dose inhalation of 0.9% saline placebo
No CWS+Fentanyl Citrate (250 mcg)Fentanyl CitrateNo chest wall strapping (unloaded control) + single-dose inhalation of nebulized fentanyl citrate (250 mcg)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Sensory intensity (Borg 0-10 scale) ratings of dyspnea at isotimeParticipants will be followed until all study visits are completed, an expected average of 3 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Montreal Chest Institute; McGill University Health Center & McGill University

🇨🇦

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath