Thermoregulation and Cognition During Cool Ambient Exposure in Tetraplegia
Tetraplegia, Hypothermia, Mild Cognitive Impairment
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Tetraplegia focused on measuring Quadriplegia, Spinal Cord Injury, Body Temperature Regulation, Mild Cognitive Impairment
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Duration of SCI ≥1 year;
- Level of SCI C3-T1, AIS A & B;
- Age between 18 and 65 years.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Evidence of sympathetic integrity below the lesion level by the skin axon-reflex vasodilatation (SkARV) test;
- Known allergies to midodrine hydrochloride;
- PMH of diagnosed heart, kidney, peripheral vascular, or cerebral vascular disease, or diabetes mellitus;
- Hypertension (BP>140/90 mmHg);
- Untreated thyroid disease;
- Acute illness or infection;
- Current smoker;
- Pregnancy.
Sites / Locations
- Center of Excellence for the Medical Consequences of SCI, James J Peters VAMC
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Cool Temperature Exposure / No Drug
Cool Temperature Exposure with Drug
Subjects are persons with tetraplegia: spinal cord lesion level C3 to T1, AIS levels A and B, ages 18-65 years or subjects are able-bodied controls matched for age and gender. Procedure is exposure to cool temperature (64° F) for up to 2 hours in a temperature-controlled room in order to assess the body's temperature-regulating mechanisms and any associated change in cognitive performance (Visit 1).
Subjects are persons with tetraplegia who completed Visit 1 (no drug). Subjects are administered a 10 mg tablet of midodrine hydrochloride by a physician before being exposed to cool temperature (64° F) for up to 2 hours in a temperature-controlled room in order to assess the body's temperature-regulating mechanisms and any associated change in cognitive performance (Visit 2).