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Active clinical trials for "Overweight"

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Train Your Brain - Executive Function

Overweight and Obesity

The purpose of this research is to test if playing games designed to improve an individual's executive function can change their views about the types of foods they eat. Executive function is a set of mental processes that people use every day to make decisions - such as what kinds of foods they choose to eat and when and where they eat those foods.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

The Effects of Almond Consumption on Functional Performance and Activity in Overweight Active Older...

Overweight

The overall objective of this proposed randomized, crossover study is to determine the effect of 12 weeks of almond consumption, ingested as a snack twice daily, on energy expenditure, performance and functional related outcomes, in active, overweight, older adults, in comparison to 12 weeks of an isocaloric matched control snack. The central hypothesis of this study is, due to the nutritionally beneficial composition of almonds, that daily consumption of an almond snack for 12 weeks will contribute to improvements in energy expenditure, physical and functional performance, vascular function, inflammation/oxidative stress, sleep quality, mood status, and body composition in active, overweight and obese older adults compared to an isocaloric commercially available snack.

Recruiting18 enrollment criteria

Glycemic Variability Comparing Two vs Six Meals in Type 2 Diabetes

Diabetes Mellitus Type 2Overweight and Obesity1 more

The frequency of meals is a very important aspect of nutrition, with profound effects on human health and in life expectancy. Excessive energy consumption is totally associated with a significant increase in the incidence of chronic diseases including diabetes. That is why nutritional therapy is recommended for all people with diabetes mellitus type 1 and 2 as an effective complement to your medical treatment. For overweight or obese type 2 diabetic patients, a low-calorie diet along with healthy eating patterns are recommended for weight loss. Similarly, modest body weight decrease may provide clinical benefits in patients, such as improved blood glucose, blood pressure, lipid profile, and others. Data about the role of nutritional habits and energy density being important precursors of obesity and diabetes are well known. On the other hand, data regarding frequency and timing of meals and how these factors relate to corporal weight are not totally understood.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Effect of Spironolactone on Adrenal or Ovarian Androgen Production in Overweight Pubertal Girls...

ObesityHyperandrogenemia1 more

Whether 12 weeks of spironolactone can reduce androgen production from ovaries and adrenal glands of girls with obesity and androgen excess

Recruiting22 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Colchicine on Food-related Effort-based Decision Making in Brain and Behaviour in...

Overweight and Obesity

The main objective of the FLAIR-i study is to study the causal role of inflammation in affecting effort-based decision making in brain and behaviour in overweight and obesity, by comparing the effect of the anti-inflammatory agent colchicine vs. placebo.

Recruiting25 enrollment criteria

A Study of LY3502970 in Chinese Participants With Obesity or Are Overweight With Weight-related...

OverweightObesity

The main purpose of this study is to learn about the safety and tolerability of LY3502970 when given to Chinese participants with obesity or overweight with weight-related comorbidities. Blood tests will be performed to investigate how the body processes the study drug and how the study drug affects the body. Each enrolled participant will receive LY3502970, or placebo given orally. For each participant, the study will last about approximately 22- and 30-weeks for both cohort 1 and 2, respectively including screening period.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

TREAT to Improve Cardiometabolic Health

Overweight and ObesityPrediabetes

Over half of American adults have overweight or obesity and are at high risk of developing type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Although caloric restriction has many health benefits, it is difficult to sustain overtime for most people. Time restricted eating (TRE), a novel type of intermittent fasting, facilitates adherence to the intervention and results in weight loss and improvement of metabolism. The investigators propose to to examine the efficacy of self monitoring and TRE (10-h/d) vs. self-monitoring and habitual prolonged eating duration ( HABIT) (13 hours/d) on weight loss and body composition, metabolic function and circadian biology, in metabolically unhealthy adults aged 50 to 75 y old, with overweight or obesity. The investigators hypothesize that TRE, compared to habitual long duration of eating, will decrease cardiovascular risk burden.

Recruiting29 enrollment criteria

Nutrition and Exercise Interventions in Reducing Androgen Deprivation Therapy-Induced Obese Frailty...

Cancer SurvivorObesity18 more

This trial studies how well nutrition and exercise interventions work in reducing androgen deprivation therapy-induced obese frailty in prostate cancer survivors. Individualized nutrition and exercise advice for prostate cancer patients on androgen deprivation therapy may help to reduce obese frailty and change the levels of myokines in blood.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

NYUCI-ES: Psychosocial Intervention to Improve Health Outcomes for Chinese and Korean ADRD Caregivers...

Dementia CaregiversDiabetes2 more

This study will conduct a two-arm randomized controlled trial to test the efficacy of a culturally tailored version of the NYU Caregiver Intervention (NYUCI) plus enhanced support (ES) through online chat groups (the NYUCI plus WeChat/Kakaotalk [population social media app for Chinese/Korean] peer support which we call the NYUCI-ES in reducing health risks for cardiometabolic disease among older Chinese and Korean American adults caring for relatives with ADRD. In collaboration with community organizations across the New York and northern New Jersey metropolitan area, we will enroll 300 caregivers of people with ADRD (150 Chinese and 150 Korean) in this study. Aim 1: Develop culturally adapted informational and educational materials about dementia and caregiving issues for social service providers of the intervention and for family caregivers. Aim 2: Test the hypothesis, H1: A counseling and support intervention (the NYUCI-ES) will significantly improve psychosocial factors such as depression, stress self-rated health and chronic disease management among Chinese and Korean-American ADRD caregivers and these changes will be mediated by improvement in social support. H1a: By the first (6- month) follow-up, the mediators (increases in social support, stress reaction) will improve significantly in the intervention group compared to baseline values and the control group. H1b: These improvements will be maintained, and lead to reduction in depressive symptoms, and improvement in self-reported health and chronic disease self-management by the 12-month follow-up compared to the control group. Aim 3: Test the hypothesis, H2: the NYUCI-ES will reduce biologic risk factors, including metabolic health (glycosylated hemoglobin) and inflammation (Oxidative stress, lipid metabolism, etc.) within 6 months of enrollment compared to baseline and a control group; these changes will be mediated through increases in social support and decreases in depressive symptoms and will be maintained at the 12-month follow-up. The public health significance of these findings will likely have an impact on health care policy for CGs from diverse underserved ethnic and cultural backgrounds, potentially reducing morbidity, and improving their quality of life.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Health Literacy-based Weight Control Intervention

ObesityOverweight

This research will be a continuation of 2015-2017 research projects of smart phone APP research granted by Ministry of Science and Technology. First of all, a four-wave-cross-sectional survey by cluster sampling is used to recruit 90 adolescents aged 13-19 from high school, vocational schools or colleges to test the feasibility of the health literacy-based weight-control program. In the second stage, a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be applied to recruit 240 overweight or obese teenagers to receive health literacy-based mobile Health App, smart sports watch Fitbit versa during the 12 months weight control program. Based on the previous research evidences, the outcome follow up will be scheduled on 3 months, 9 months, 15 months, and 21 months after the mobile Health Apps intervention. Short-term outcome indicators include health literacy, diet pattern, and dietary behaviors; long-term outcome indicators include BMI z-score, waist circumference. Intention-to-treat analysis, generalized linear mixed models with repeated measures, multiple regression analysis model, and counterfactual causal Inference will be applied to analyze the effectiveness of the interventions.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria
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