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Active clinical trials for "Obesity"

Results 3031-3040 of 3572

Is Physical Activity, Obesity, and Ethnicity Associated With the Tethering and Migration of Pro-inflammatory...

Physical ActivityCentral Obesity1 more

Being south Asian or centrally obese may be associated with an increased risk of inflammation. The investigators are seeking to investigate whether this is the case by recruiting white European and south Asian men who are lean or have central obesity. Further, the investigators wish to investigate whether physical activity influences the associations.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Effects of Bariatric Surgery on Different Compositions of Trunk Fat and Mechanisms

Bariatric Surgery CandidateAdiposity1 more

This is a prospective, single-center, observational study to explore effects of bariatric surgery on different compositions of trunk fat and mechanisms.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Open Lung Approach Versus Conventional Protective Ventilation in Obese Patients Undergoing Open...

Abdominal SurgeryObese Patients

the purpose of this study is to compare open lung approach versus conventional protective ventilation in obese patients undergoing open abdominal surgery

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Potential Associations Between Alterations in Gut Microbiome and Obesity-related Traits After the...

ObesityBariatric Surgery

This study aimed to examine the effects of obesity and bariatric surgery on gut microbiota in a Turkish population, and to contribute to the literature by bringing multi-dimensional parameters including dietary intake, metabolic and inflammatory markers. This case-control study was conducted between June 2015 and August 2019. All participants were followed during the six-month period. Face-to-face interviews and physical examinations were held, and blood and fecal samples were collected at the baseline (M0) and at the end of 3 (M3) and 6 months (M6). Dietary intakes of subjects were assessed using 24-h dietary recall method in each interview and a detailed quantitative food frequency questionnaire that involved 85 food items. Subjects were recruited to the study as three groups: 15 patients who had bariatric surgery as study group, 8 morbidly obese participants who did not have bariatric surgery as control group-1 and 11 participants who were non-obese (lean (n=5) and pre-obese (n=6)) as control group-2. All subjects in the study group had sleeve gastrectomy. Subjects in control groups were selected as age and gender matched with the participants in the study group. Individuals were excluded if (a) they were under 19 or above 65 years old, (b) they had an acute or chronic inflammatory disease, (c) they were diagnosed with infectious diseases, cancer or alcohol addiction, (d) they used antibiotics in last 3 months before the screening.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Autophagy and Inflammasome in Obesity: Effect of Weight Loss and Potential Therapeutic Implications...

Obesity

The main aim of this project is to determine the implication of autophagy and inflammasome in the pathogenesis of obesity and related comorbidities, and to explore in depth the mechanisms associated with the activation of immune cells leading early stages of the atherosclerotic process and metabolic disease. The hypothesis of the present study is that weight loss mediated by Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) improves the protein expression of markers of autophagy and inflammation within immune cells. Moreover, the investigators will explore the association of these mechanisms with the mitochondrial function and dynamics, Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) stress an intracellular nutritional status of leukocytes (measured by fluorescence microscopy and western blot). Further, the potential relationship between changes in the mentioned intracellular pathways and systemic pathological mechanisms including oxidative stress, inflammation and glucose and lipid metabolism will be explored. Hence, serum carbonylated proteins, myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels, antioxidant enzymatic activities including SOD (Superoxide dismutase) and catalase, circulating cytokines, and glucose and lipid metabolism parameters will be evaluated in a cohort of obese subjects before and 12 months after RYGB intervention.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Adiponectin, ICAM-1, VCAM-1 Levels and Metabolic Syndrome in Obese Adolescents

ObesityAbdominal Obesity6 more

Adipose tissue secreting a number of adipokines which regulate insulin sensitivity, energy metabolism and vascular homeostasis, so the dysfunction of adipose tissue is linked with the incidence of obesity accompanied with insulin resistance, hypertension and cardiovascular disease (1). Obesity is known to alters the expression of adipokines due to the adipose tissue hypertrophy (2), including adiponectin, in which able to exert a potent anti-inflammatory and vascular protective effect (2). It has been proposed that adiponectin acts to prevent the vascular dysfunction due to obesity and diabetes by improves insulin sensitivity and metabolic profiles to reduce the risk factors for cardiovascular disease and protects the vasculature through its pleiotropic actions on endothelial cells, endothelial progenitor cells, smooth muscle cells and macrophages (1). The concentrations of adiponectin of 5 to 25 mg/mL had a significant inhibitory effect on the expression of monocyte adhesion and adhesion molecule induced by TNF-α in vitro. Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease in which adhesion molecules on arterial endothelial cells are responsible for the accumulation of monocytes/macrophages and T lymphocytes. While obesity is low-grade inflammation in which make a contribution on endothelial dysfunction by increasing the oxygen-derived free radicals (ROS) due to adipocyte hypertrophy, leads to an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and mitochondrial dysfunction (3). Adiponectin is accumulated in the vasculature, and it reduced on obesity due to suppression by TNF-α and lead to adiponectin-deficiency which stimulate the significant increases of Vascular cell adhesion protein 1 (VCAM-1) and Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1 (ICAM-1) or known as CD54 in aortic intima (4). Here we investigate the level of adiponectin, ICAM-1, VCAM-1 with the incidence of MetS in obese adolescents.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Comparison of McCoy Laryngoscope and C-MAC D-blade Video Laryngoscope in Obese Patients

Obesity

Obesity is associated with difficult intubation rate of 30%, and this study was performed to compare the use of McCoy laryngoscope and C-MAC D-blade video laryngoscope for intubation in obese patients. A total 104 patients with body mass index (BMI) ≥ 35kg/m² scheduled for general anesthesia were randomly assigned to be intubated with McCoy laryngoscope or C-MAC D-blade video laryngoscope. The primary outcome was intubation time, and secondary outcomes were mask ventilation scale, intubation difficulty scale (IDS), percentage of glottis opening (POGO) score, and hemodynamic variables including mean arterial pressure, heart rate and saturation.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Venous Thromboprophylaxis in Bariatric Surgery

Obesity

The main aim of this study is to compare the influence of total body-weight (TBW), lean body-weight (LBW), ideal body-weight (IBW) or Body Mass Index (BMI) on peak anti-Xa levels at steady-state in bariatric surgery (BS) morbidly obese patients receiving a fixed double dose of dalteparin (5000 IU subcutaneously, twice daily a day) for venous thromboembolism (VTE) prevention. Secondary aims of this study are to identify which body size descriptors (BSD) has the greatest impact and could further be explored for an adjusted low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) dosing algorithm for achieving optimal VTE prevention in BS severely obese patients.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

The Effects of VEGF-B Signaling Pathway in Obesity and Metabolic Disease

ObesityMetabolic Disease

The investigators will enroll about 120 subjects from the hospital's healthcare center. The investigators will collect the basic informations, blood pressure, body mass index, fasting blood glucose and fasting blood lipids of each subject. The investigators will collect the blood samples and then test them for fasting insulin levels, VEGF-B levels, the gene promoter region methylation status and the genomic protein methylation levels of the VEGF-B gene of the cells,and finally do the statistical analysis.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Vitamin K to Slow Progression of Dyslipidemia and Diabetes Risk (Vita-K 'n' Kids Study II)

ObesityInsulin Resistance5 more

Animal studies have found that vitamin K-dependent proteins matrix Gla protein and osteocalcin beneficially influence lipid and glucose metabolism, respectively. However, this concept has not been tested in humans at risk for dyslipidemia and diabetes risk. Vitamin K supplementation presents an opportunity to test the hypothesized link between the vitamin K-dependent proteins and markers of lipid and glucose metabolism. The investigators will conduct an 8-week vitamin K intervention (to manipulate carboxylation of matrix Gla protein and osteocalcin) and determine its effects on markers of dyslipidemia and diabetes risk. Sixty obese children will be randomly allocated to either the control group receiving placebo or the low-dose (45 mcg/d) or high-dose group (90 mcg/d) receiving vitamin K (menaquinone-7).

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria
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