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Active clinical trials for "Pediatric Obesity"

Results 431-440 of 921

An Evaluation of a Web-based System for Optimization of Behavioral Childhood Obesity Treatment

Childhood Obesity

This study evaluates the families' and health care professional's experience from using a web based support system including mobile applications for self-monitoring weight and physical activity. Changes in BMI standard deviation score are compared between usual care (control) and usual care with complementary web-based support system (intervention).

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Energy Balance Teens: A Measurement Error Approach to Estimating Energy Balance in Free-Living Adolescents...

Childhood Obesity

There is a critical need to develop an affordable, valid, and reliable techniques to assess free-living energy expenditure (EE), energy storage (ES), and energy intake (EI). The purpose of this project is to develop and evaluate statistical procedures to model, quantify and adjust for the measurement error of and consumer (e.g., Garmin) activity monitors and body composition scales to estimate EE and ES, and use the 'calibrated' values to estimate free-living EI.

Active3 enrollment criteria

A Pharmacokinetic Study Comparing VI-0521 With Placebo in Obese Adolescents

Pediatric ObesityChildhood Obesity

The primary objective of this study is to describe the pharmacokinetic profiles of VI-0521 in obese adolescents.

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Role of Parenting Skills and Parenting Style in Pediatric Weight Loss Programs

Pediatric Obesity

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of different parenting skills and parenting styles in the success of children enrolled in a family-based behavioral weight control program and to compare these skills and styles to those used by families with normal weight children.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Study of a Structured Parent Intervention on Adolescent Weight Loss Modification Program.

Pediatric ObesityImpact of Parent Intervention on Adolescent Weight Loss

The study will enroll 110 overweight and obese adolescents ages 11-16 in a lifestyle modification program focusing on dietary modification and exercise. Parents will be randomized into control and motivational interviewing-based intervention groups. The primary hypothesis is that adolescents whose parents are in the intervention group will have improved compliance, weight loss and health outcomes compared with adolescents whose parents do not receive the intervention.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

BMI Screening and Reporting in Schools: The Fit Study

Pediatric ObesityOverweight

The Fit Study is a three-year, cluster-randomized controlled trial that will evaluate the impact of school-based body mass index (BMI) screening and reporting on child health. Seventy-nine California schools will be randomized to one of three groups: 1) BMI screening and reporting, 2) BMI screening, and 3) no BMI screening or reporting (control). Investigators will assess the impact of BMI reporting on students' BMI trajectories over three years. Investigators will also assess the impact of BMI screening on weight-based teasing, feelings of stigmatization, and weight-control behaviors among students.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Predictors of Success in an Intervention Program for the Treatment of Childhood Obesity

Childhood Obesity

The child health and sports center, at the Meir Medical Center, runs for over 10 years an intervention program to treat obese children. The program includes physical activity, nutritional intervention and behavioral treatment. A similar program exists in the nearby city of Hadera. The aim of the programs is to promote weight loss, encourage physical activity and modify behavior in order to get long term results. The aim of the present study is to try and identify the demographic and behavioral characteristics of children who succeed in the program.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Weight Loss With Meal-Replacement Therapy in Teens

ObesitySevere1 more

This study seeks to examine whether meal-replacement therapy is able to enhance weight loss among teens with severe obesity. In addition, we are also interested in examining the degree of weight loss needed to improve important cardiometabolic risk factors among adolescents.

Completed22 enrollment criteria

Pediatric Primary Hypertension and the Renin-Angiotensin System (PHRAS)

Pediatric DisorderPediatric Obesity1 more

Pediatric primary hypertension is increasingly common, occurring in 5-10% of normal-weight children and up to 25% of children with obesity. It is a risk factor for adult cardiovascular and renal disease. But even during childhood, hypertension is associated with significant morbidity, including cognitive impairment and organ damage. In the heart and kidneys, this organ damage is characterized by thickened heart muscle (left ventricular hypertrophy) and spillage of protein in the urine (albuminuria). Obese children are also at risk for fatty liver disease. However, the cause of pediatric primary hypertension, the role of obesity, and the mechanisms behind heart and kidney injury are poorly understood. Due to these limitations, there are no first-line medications, and treatment is often inadequate. An altered renin-angiotensin system may cause primary hypertension and related organ damage. Evidence suggests uric acid, FGF23, klotho, and obesity play a role in renin-angiotensin system-mediated injury. An improved comprehension of the pathophysiology of pediatric primary hypertension could enhance clinical care by targeting treatment to the cause of disease and informing novel measurement of organ damage.

Active7 enrollment criteria

Childhood Obesity Treatment - Telephone Coaching vc Usual Care

Childhood Obesity

This study evaluates if usual physical care visits to an outpatient pediatric clinic can be replaced with more frequent and shorter Telephone coaching Contacts during 18 months.

Completed4 enrollment criteria
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