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Active clinical trials for "Weight Loss"

Results 931-940 of 1462

Lose 2 Win A Novel Method to Motivate Weight Loss Maintenance Among College Students

OverweightObese

Investigators are conducting a randomized controlled trial with overweight and obese college students on the University of Minnesota campus. The primary outcome will be weight loss measured 12 months after study enrollment (corresponds to 10 months after the end of treatment).

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Journey to Better Health

Weight Loss

This study is being conducted in 8 rural counties in Alabama and Mississippi (4 per state). Approximately 400 overweight or obese African American women living in the selected counties will participate in a 2-year weight loss study.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Time Restricted Feeding for Weight Loss and Cardio-protection

Coronary DiseaseWeight Loss

Time restricted feeding (TRF) is a novel form of intermittent fasting that involves confining the period of food intake to 8 h/d (e.g. 10 am to 6 pm) without calorie counting. TRF is effective for weight loss and cardio-protection in obese adults. It is of great interest to see whether subjects can adhere to TRF for longer periods of time, and to see what degree of weight loss that can be achieved with TRF. Accordingly, the aims of this trial are: Aim 1: To determine if TRF can be implemented to facilitate weight loss in obese adults, and Aim 2: To determine if TRF can produce clinically meaningful reductions in plasma lipids, blood pressure, insulin resistance, and inflammatory markers.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Promoting Weight-Loss in African American Cancer Survivors in the Deep South

Weight LossCancer

This study tests evidence-based strategies for weight loss among overweight and obesity cancer survivors and family members in rural Alabama.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Feasibility of a Social Media-based Weight Loss Program for Low Socioeconomic Status Individuals...

Obesity

The purpose of this study is to see if it is practical to use social media-based and traditional online weight loss intervention components among low socioeconomic status participants using the Facebook social media (SM) and Fitbit self-monitoring platforms. Also, the study will test the effectiveness of recruiting participants via social media and at community events and locations. The results of this study will be used to inform future research studies.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Healthy Body Healthy Souls in the Marshallese Population

Weight LossPre Diabetes1 more

The primary aim is to pilot test a weight-loss intervention for Marshallese adults, referred to throughout as Healthy Bodies Healthy Souls (HBHS). The HBHS intervention includes the Wholeness, Oneness, Righteousness, Deliverance Diabetes Prevention Program Lifestyle Intervention (WORD DPP) implemented at the individual level, with the additional enhancement of working with Marshallese churches to implement church-level changes to support the individual behavioral intervention of the WORD DPP. We will then compare changes in outcomes with participants in the churches who were exposed to the policy changes but did not participate in the WORD DPP, and with those enrolled in a separate DPP trial who participated in the WORD DPP but were not exposed to church-level policy changes.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Resection of the Esophagus and Subsequent Weight Loss

Esophageal CancerWeight Gain2 more

The investigators aim to ascertain how food reward signals and eating behaviour relates to the gut-brain pathway in weight-losing patients after curative surgery for oesophageal cancer, and how this pathway responds to clinical treatment for this unintentional weight loss. The primary outcomes are the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal on functional MRI (fMRI), and the breakpoint during the progressive ratio task (PRT - a measure of eating behaviour), how these differ in response to multiple clinical treatment options, as well as how they relate to weight gain while on treatment.

Suspended16 enrollment criteria

Dietary Approaches for Cardiometabolic Health

ObesityAbdominal4 more

This pilot study aims to recruit 30 adults with abdominal obesity, without major chronic disease, and test whether clinical dietary advice that is solely focused on the timing of eating (time restricted eating), has an effect on cardiometabolic health compared to standard dietary advice for cardiometabolic health, which is focused on content. The goal of this pilot study is to develop and hone dietary counseling approaches for time restricted eating for RD's in a clinical practice paradigm, and collect data on testing this intervention compared to standard dietary counseling approaches for cardiometabolic health.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Fit After Baby: Increasing Postpartum Weight Loss in Women at Increased Risk for Cardiometabolic...

Cardiovascular DiseasesDiabetes6 more

This study plans to learn more about how to increase postpartum weight loss and how to decrease risk factors for postpartum women at increased risk for diabetes and heart disease. The program is delivered using a mobile application (app) and a lifestyle coach. This mobile application is developed for women who are at higher risk for diabetes and heart disease. Women who have gestational diabetes, (diabetes during pregnancy, or GDM), gestational hypertension (high blood pressure), and/or preeclampsia (high blood pressure and protein in the urine), and/or small-for gestational-age, and/or preterm (early) delivery during their pregnancies have a higher risk for diabetes and heart disease. This mobile application was developed using the latest research studies and using the evidence-based Diabetes Prevention and Colorado Weigh programs. The goal of the program is to help women lose weight and participate in physical activity after delivery.

Completed33 enrollment criteria

Change in Reward System Activation and Gut Microbiota Following RYGB and Sleeve Gastrectomy for...

Bariatric Surgery Candidate

Bariatric surgery is considered an effective long-term intervention for the treatment of obesity and associated complications. While bariatric surgery has been shown to result in a large sustained weight loss, the degree of weight loss and maintenance thereafter varies greatly. The Heads Up Surgical Demonstration Project (Heads Up) is a 5 year project examining weight loss after an intensive medical intervention (IMI) and the 2 most widely used bariatric surgeries (roux-en-y gastric bypass or RYGB and sleeve gastrectomy or SG). Baseline data are collected prior to surgery and follow-up data are collected at 6 months and annually thereafter. A recent meta-analysis revealed that RYGB resulted in greater weight loss and is more effective in resolving obesity related comorbidities than SG, although SG has been shown to result in a reduction of perioperative complications and reoperations1. Full elucidation of the mechanisms leading to variation in success for weight loss interventions is crucial to understanding the most effective and reliable treatments for obesity and associated comorbidities.

Completed27 enrollment criteria
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