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Active clinical trials for "Metabolic Syndrome"

Results 391-400 of 1616

Slowing HEART diSease With Lifestyle and Omega-3 Fatty Acids

Coronary Heart DiseaseMetabolic Syndrome

The purpose of the study is to target inflammation to reduce progression of noncalcified plaque in the coronary arteries using omega-3 fatty acid supplementation compared to standard of care.

Completed41 enrollment criteria

Effect of Aged Garlic Extract on Atherosclerosis

Metabolic Syndrome

The investigators will be assessing the effect of Aged Garlic Extract on the coronary arteries. The investigators will enroll patients in a double blind study, where half the patients will receive placebo, and have the patients undergo a series of tests of plaque (CT scan of the heart, carotid ultrasound) and follow the patients on the drug or placebo and then repeat the tests and blood work at the end of one year. The investigators will assess if being on aged garlic extract adds any benefit to plaque in the coronary or neck arteries. The investigators will also assess the effect of aged garlic extract on markers of inflammation. Patients will receive free drug, free testing and be compensated, and learn more about their heart and neck arteries. if successful, more patients can use this drug to benefit their health. The harms include the radiation from the CT scan and the medication, which has mild side effects.

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Effects of Yoga on Metabolic Syndrome

Metabolic Syndrome

Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a clustering of cardiovascular risk factors characterizing central obesity, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia and high blood pressure. The concept of MetS represents the pre-cardiovascular and pre-diabetic pathologic conditions, which has been a useful tool in prognosing the development of cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus. Importantly, interventions applied at the pre-pathologic stage with MetS would be of great clinical and health significance in achieving better preventive and therapeutic outcomes. Yoga, a mind-body exercise, has been suggested to have beneficial effects on dyslipidemia, hypertension and diabetes. A pilot study has demonstrated the trends in the improvement of metabolic parameters in middle-aged adults with MetS but the findings are inconclusive because of the small sample size and brief yoga follow-up period (i.e., 2-month). In addition to the needs of a better designed randomized controlled trial in studying the beneficial effect of yoga in controlling MetS in middle-aged individuals, the investigation on yoga and MetS in elderly population has been lacking. This is important as the potential use of yoga as lifestyle modification in elderly individuals with MetS will result in significant reduction of the prevalence of cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Thus, this study aims to examine the efficacy of yoga exercise in improving metabolic abnormalities in middle-aged and older adults with MetS. In addition to elderly, middle-aged adults are included in the present investigation because of the idea that cardiovascular diseases and diabetes with aging can be mostly prevented by intervention at the middle-age. A randomized controlled trial with repeated measure design will be conducted to examine the effect of 1-year regular yoga training on the MetS parameters in middle-aged and older individuals who are 30-60 and 60-80 years of age, respectively. Primary outcome measures include waist circumference, systolic/diastolic blood pressure, blood glucose, triglyceride, and lipid cholesterol profile whereas secondary outcome measures include self-reported stress and depression levels. This study is anticipated to provide valuable information in exploring the therapeutic role of yoga in managing MetS. As yoga exercise is an economical regimen which can be easily and readily applied to large scale of target population, it is of hope to be practically useful to relieve the burden on cardiovascular disease and diabetes by introducing yoga lifestyle to the management of MetS.

Completed24 enrollment criteria

Study to Evaluate Safety and Efficacy of PreCrea® on Subjects With Higher Than Normal Blood Sugar...

Diabetes MellitusPre-Diabetes2 more

The purpose of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of PreCrea® on subjects with higher than normal blood sugar levels.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Tolerance of Treatment With DHA, Choline and Vitamin E in Children With Non-alcoholic...

Fatty LiverLiver Fibrosis3 more

The purpose of this interventional study is to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), Vitamin E and Choline in children or adolescents with well-characterized and liver biopsy confirmed nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Exercise, Statins, and the Metabolic Syndrome

Metabolic SyndromeObese1 more

Here we tested if statins or exercise plus statins had a greater capacity to lower metabolic syndrome risk factors in sedentary individuals with at least 2 metabolic syndrome risk factors. We also examined if statins impacted exercise response for mitochondrial content in muscle or aerobic fitness.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy of Aripiprazole and Ziprasidone Among Schizophrenic Patients With Metabolic...

Schizophrenia

Introduction: Schizophrenia is a serious mental illness. For majority of patients it is a lifetime condition,characterized by intermittent episodes of hospitalization due to relapse or acute symptom exacerbation. The nature and course of the disorder impose significant social and economic burden. Relapse is costly, with hospitalization accounting for a substantial portion of healthcare expenses. Second generation antipsychotic side effect such as metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus will contribute additional costs to the treatment. Many studies have since then provided convincing evidence for a high risk of diabetes and other glucose abnormalities, metabolic syndrome and mortality due to elevated cardiovascular risk in patients with schizophrenia. However many studies has shown the effectiveness and safety of aripiprazole and ziprazidone.In one of the study, aripiprazole showed improvement of negative schizophrenic symptoms by 25% and 50% of functioning level from baseline. In term of safety, antipsychotics considered to have a safer metabolic profile were amisulpride, ziprasidone and aripiprazole. Study objectives: To investigate the safety and efficacy of ziprazidone versus aripiprazole in the treatment of schizophrenia patients with metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus. To investigate the reversibility of metabolic syndrome and diabetes parameters following the treatment with ziprazidone versus aripiprazole. Hypotheses: * The proportion of reversibility of metabolic syndrome and diabetes parameters is higher following the treatment of ziprazidone than aripiprazole.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

The BANGALORE Study; Combination of Berberine, Lipoic Acid, and Picrorhiza

Metabolic Syndrome

Though medical treatment has been effective in the treatment of cardiometabolic diseases (including coronary atherosclerosis and diabetes mellitus), the incidence of these disorders continues to be high. Many reasons are responsible, but lifestyle changes, including an increased prevalence of obesity and the metabolic syndrome, are significant for this cause. Diagnosis and treatment of obese patients with hypertension requires that health care providers address the issues of hypertension, glucose intolerance, body weight and dyslipidemia. A sedentary lifestyle and poor cardiorespiratory fitness are not only associated with the (cardio) metabolic syndrome but could actually be considered features of the metabolic syndrome. These issues are significant in the health of certain individuals, who experience greater difficulty in treated BP control, experience increased hypertensive and diabetic complications, and have higher levels of obesity. In this study, the investigators will evaluate the efficacy of the nutritional supplements berberine, alpha-lipoic acid, and picrorhiza (CAR-191) when consumed 30 minutes before meals, on appetite suppression, body composition and weight control. Additionally, the investigators will evaluate the effects of this combination of nutraceuticals on the mechanistic effects of oxidation, inflammation, and vascular function in a high-risk population with the metabolic syndrome. Primary Objective To assess the comparative effect of a combination (known as CAR-191) of berberine (200 mg), alpha-lipoic acid (150 mg), and picrorhiza (100 mg) three times a day, compared to placebo three times a day, on parameters relate to appetite suppression, weight control and body composition in a high risk population with the metabolic syndrome. Secondary Co-objectives To evaluate the effects of CAR-191 versus placebo on changes in: Endothelial function using noninvasive brachial artery reactivity (BAR) ultrasound Biomarkers including IL-6, HOMA-IR, HbA1C, hsCRP, adiponectin, plasma/urine isoprostanes, PAI-1, TNFα-II, aldosterone, and glutathione redox ratio Urinary protein excretion Clinical chemistry including plasma glucose, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, total bilirubin, uric acid, transaminases (SGOT/AST, SGPT/ALT), alkaline phosphatase, C-reactive protein, and lipoproteins

Completed22 enrollment criteria

Effect of Magnesium Administration in Subjects With Family History of Diabetes or Metabolic Syndrome...

Family History of Metabolic SyndromeFamily History of Diabetes

Magnesium is the second most abundant ion in human cells and plays fundamental roles in several enzymatic reactions: it is involved in ATP production, in the phosphorylation of proteins, in glucose metabolism and in the contraction of cytoskeleton. Several epidemiological studies demonstrated that low dietary magnesium intake is inversely associated with diabetes mellitus, hypertension and metabolic syndrome. Magnesium could be related to important haemodynamic and metabolic anomalies: at vascular level it acts as an antagonist of calcium, especially in vascular smooth muscle cells, thus its deficit could enhance vascular contraction; with regard to glucose metabolism, magnesium is involved in the physiopathological mechanism of insulin resistance, through a reduction in cellular uptake of glucose. This condition and the subsequent compensatory hyperinsulinemia can ultimately lead to increased synthesis of proinflammatory cytokines and to endothelial dysfunction. Thus, magnesium depletion and subsequent alterations can increase the risk of developing vascular disease such as atherosclerosis and has been associated with cardiovascular events. Several clinical trials have explored the possible beneficial effect of magnesium supplementation on blood pressure, plasma lipids and insulin resistance but the results are often contradictory. One of the possibilities for these unclear results could be that in some of them the interventions started too late when haemodynamic and metabolic changes are more difficult to revert. The investigators hypothesis is that magnesium supplementation in a population at increased genetic risk of developing metabolic syndrome but without it could improve blood pressure and the other metabolic syndrome related components. Thus, the aim of the present study is to evaluate the effect of oral supplementation of magnesium (16.2 mmol/day of magnesium pidolate) on metabolic syndrome's components in a sample of 15 subjects who are at increased risk of developing metabolic syndrome since have a positive familiar history of type II diabetes mellitus and/or metabolic syndrome(AHA/NHLBI criteria).

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Healthy Bodies, Healthy Kids

Child Mental DisordersObesity1 more

The US prevalence of childhood-onset obesity and type 2 diabetes, both predictors of cardiovascular risk, have increased to epidemic proportions in recent decades. Children with mental illness, especially those treated with antipsychotic medications, are at additional risk for obesity (adiposity) and related risk conditions. A variety of noninvasive techniques to assess cardiometabolic risk have begun to be applied in children, including body composition measured with dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA), carotid intima media thickness (CIMT) measured by ultrasound, and hepatic triglyceride content measured using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging-estimated proton density fat fraction (PDFF). These measures allow for the early, noninvasive study of adiposity-related metabolic risk. The overall aim of this two-study research plan is to characterize the level of measurable risk using these sensitive markers in treated and untreated children with mental health disorders, and to evaluate the magnitude of change in risk that can be observed using these biomarkers in children receiving a well established behavioral weight-loss intervention.

Completed16 enrollment criteria
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