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Active clinical trials for "Hyperlipidemias"

Results 191-200 of 695

Amlodipine/Atorvastatin Combination to Reduce the Health Risk of High Blood Pressure and High Cholesterol...

HypertensionHyperlipidemia

The purpose of the study is to measure the effect of the amlodipine/atorvastatin combination pill in reducing both elevated blood pressure and cholesterol levels to levels suggested by guidelines

Completed3 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Switching to Aripiprazole on Heart Health in Overweight and Obese Patients With Schizophrenia...

OverweightHyperlipidemia1 more

This is a 2-year study proposing to examine the effects of aripiprazole on heart health factors such as serum lipids, serum leptin, fasting blood sugar, body weight and blood pressure. This study also examines the safety of switching to aripiprazole with respect to changes in the clinical state, preexisting or emergent side-effects, how the brain processes information and changes in social functioning and quality of life.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Comparison of the Effect of MCFA and LCFA on Postprandial Appetite and Lipemia

Lipemia

The main objective is to investigate if foods high in coconut oil (MCFA) or palm oil (LCFA) have different impacts on postprandial blood lipid levels and appetite via a visual analog scale (VAS).

Completed14 enrollment criteria

"Phospholipovit" vs Placebo in Patients With Combined Hyperlipidemia

Combined Hyperlipidemia

"Phospholipovit" vs placebo in patients with combined hyperlipidemia

Completed32 enrollment criteria

The Antihypercholestrolemic Effect of a Combined Nutritional Supplementation of Standardized Extracts...

Hyperlipidemia

Nutraceutical lipid-lowering interventions are becoming increasingly popular, particularly among patients who are intolerant or refractory to prescription statins, or who desire alternative non-conventional pharmacological treatment to manage their dyslipidaemia, whether they previously experienced statin intolerance or not. A growing body of preclinical and clinical evidence suggest that the amla (Emblica officinalis) red yeast rice (RYR), olive and walnut leaf extracts posses consideable hpolipidaemic pharmacological effects.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Effects of Green Tea Extract on Obese Women With High Level of LDL

ObeseHyperlipidemia

Green tea is one of the most popular beverages in the world. It is believed to have beneficial effect in prevention and treatment of many diseases, one of which is reducing LDL-C. The aim of the study is to examine the effect of supplement containing GTE on obese with high LDL level.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Long-term Effects of CPAP on Lipidemia and Hs-CRP Levels in OSA Patients

Obstructive Sleep ApneaCoronary Heart Disease

The increased risk of atherosclerotic morbidity and mortality in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been linked to hypertension, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and systemic inflammation. The relationship regarding obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and lipidemia and systemic inflammation is far from conclusion for obesity as a strong confounding factor.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Comparison of the Efficacy and Safety of Cresnon® and Crestor® in Patients With Hyperlipidemia

Hyperlipidemia

Comparison of the efficacy and safety of Cresnon® and Crestor® in patients with hyperlipidemia - 8-week, active-controlled, open-label, randomized, parallelgroup, fixed-dose, noninferiority, multicenter, phase 4 design

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Lipid-lowering Effect of Plant Stanol Ester Yoghurt Drinks

HypercholesterolemiaHyperlipidemias1 more

The aim is to investigate the effects of yoghurt drinks containing two doses of plant stanol ester either with or without added camelina oil on the serum cholesterol levels in moderately hypercholesterolemic subjects

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Financial Incentives for Medication Adherence

Diabetes MellitusHypertension1 more

This study is a pilot study. The investigators have designed a randomized, controlled trial of financial incentives in medication adherence, focusing primarily on poorly-controlled diabetes, and secondarily on hypertension, and high cholesterol. Prior work has shown that many patients do not take their medications as prescribed by their doctors. This contributes to increased rates of bad outcomes such as blindness, kidney failure, heart attack, and death. The investigators hypothesize that use of a financial incentive will motivate patients to improve their medication adherence and ultimately their control of their chronic diseases. The investigators plan to identify patients who get Primary Care at Boston Medical Center who still have high blood sugars more than a year after their diabetes diagnosis, and randomize them to a control arm, or one of two intervention arms. Subjects will be approached at the time of a regularly-scheduled appointment with their Primary Care doctor and offered the opportunity to participate in the study. All subjects who agree to participate in the study will meet with a Clinical Pharmacologist to review their medications in detail, and then undergo randomization. Subjects in the first intervention group will receive a cash incentive for picking up medications for the targeted conditions from the pharmacy each month. Subjects in the second intervention group will receive a cash incentive for picking up medications for the targeted conditions from the pharmacy each month, and a one-time payment at the conclusion of the study based on the amount of hemoglobin A1c decrease. The investigators will enroll a total of 100 subjects in the study, and anticipate an observational cohort of approximately 1,000 patients. All patients who are eligible for the study but who are not enrolled in the study and have not declined to participate in the study will become the observational cohort for the study. The observational cohort will be used to determine whether randomization to the control arm of the study has a negative, rather than neutral, effect on patients. At the end of eight months, all subjects will meet with a Visiting Nurse in their home, to have their blood pressure checked and to have their blood drawn so that their blood sugar and cholesterol can be measured. Outcomes to be evaluated include hemoglobin A1c, lipid panel, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, self-reported health, microvascular and macrovascular complications, and death.

Completed10 enrollment criteria
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