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Browse 3,346 clinical trials for kidney disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT05309109
In patients on maintenance hemodialysis (HD), protein energy wasting (PEW) defined as loss of muscle mass and fuel reserves of the body is frequent and associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Several factors, including inflammation, oxidative stress, metabolic disorders, loss of nutrients, diabetes, retention of middle molecule uremic toxins and dialysis procedure contribute to PEW. It has been previously reported that intensive HD treatments such as short daily and nocturnal HD may improve nutritional parameters. Moreover, post-dilution Online hemodiafiltration (OL-HDF) may also improve PEW by preserving lean body mass evaluated by bioimpedance analysis (BIA) probably through decreased inflammation, stimulation of appetite and better removal of uremic toxins. The recently developed medium cut-off dialyzer (MCO) in HD has demonstrated efficient depuration of middle uremic toxins as compared to high flux HD (HF-HD), similar to that of OL-HDF. Both MCO-HD and OL-HDF may exert beneficial effects on PEW, since they increase removal of higher weight middle molecules, which mostly encompass proteins related to inflammation and PEW in the uremic milieu
NCT06846034
Diabetes mellitus is a non-transmissible disease whose incidence is growing worldwide . This pathology is defined by a chronic hyperglycaemia linked to a deficiency of either insulin secretion or its action or both. This increased prevalence is linked to the growing of the obese population on one hand, and to the ageing of the population, on the other hand, which is associated with an increased prevalence of metabolic diseases. The number of patients with diabetes, particularly type 2 diabetes (T2D) is regularly increasing. In France, the prevalence of diabetes is 4- 6% of the adult population. Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a growing public health problem and therefore constitutes a major factor in progressive kidney disease. DKD has become the leading cause of end stage kidney disease (ESKD), requiring dialysis or transplantation. Current routine screening for DKD is limited to detecting of impaired glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and/or elevated albuminuria, typically manifests in later stages of DKD. Therefore, the current methods to screen for DKD lack the resolution to capture the earliest functional changes associated with DKD. Chronic renal hypoxia plays a crucial role in the development and progression of DKD and may affect Renal hemodynamic. The aim to assess the feasibility of the measure of hypoxa-induced renal hemodynamics parameters.