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Showing 1-6 of 6 trials
NCT07588984
This research program includes two coordinated prospective studies (FLOURISH and THRIVE) evaluating the real-world effectiveness of Noom's digital health programs on weight, cardiometabolic biomarkers, physiological health indicators, and program engagement. FLOURISH is a 6-arm prospective cohort study comparing an Education-only control, Noom Weight, standard-dose compounded semaglutide, microdose compounded semaglutide, standard-dose tirzepatide (Noom Plus), and microdose tirzepatide (Noom Plus Microdose). THRIVE is a nested 2-arm prospective study comparing a Proactive Health program to a Noom Free Tier control. Participants complete monthly surveys, remote biomarker collection (Tasso device), connected-scale weigh-ins, and in-app biometric assessments (FaceScan, BodyScan). Microdose and Free Tier arms also use wearable fitness trackers. Primary outcomes are changes in cardiometabolic biomarkers, weight, body composition, and GLP-1 side effect profile. Total N = 2,310; 24-month duration.
NCT07343804
Study subjects were obtained from the pool of OPD patients in the Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics, PGIDS, Rohtak, and the Department of Cardiology, PGIMS, Rohtak. Baseline clinical, radiographic, and laboratory parameters (hsCRP and IL-6) were recorded. Patients were then randomly allocated to one of the two groups. In the test group, single-sitting root canal treatment was performed immediately, while in the control group, delayed endodontic intervention (after 3 months) was performed after three months. Clinical and laboratory parameters were again assessed at the end of 3 months in both groups. hsCRP and IL-6 indices were again done in the delayed treatment group after 3 months of root canal treatment.
NCT07048717
Mauritius is located in the southern Indian Ocean with a population of 1.3 million in 2023. Mauritius is a multiethnic nation with 68% South Asian, 27% African (Creole), 3% Chinese and 2% Franco Mauritians. Seven population-based cross-sectional surveys using standardised protocols were conducted between 1987 and 2021). The participation rate has been over 85% in each survey. At each survey, participants were interviewed about living conditions, lifestyle and health, and anthropometry and blood pressure were measured. Biochemistry including lipids and an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) were performed Electrocardiograms (ECG) were recorded in participants aged 35 years and older. Previous participants were followed up in 2007 and 92% were successfully traced. Studies with identical methodology have been performed on the neighbouring island Rodrigues where the majority of the population are Creoles.
NCT06967389
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the drug semaglutide changes markers of disease risk as it relates to weight in children ages 12-15 years old who are obese (class 2 or 3). The main questions it aims to answer are: * How do the rate of weight loss, body mass index (BMI), body composition, heart structure and function, and exercise ability interact with one another in the study population at enrollment? * How do risk markers of disease change over the study in the study participants who are given semaglutides to help with weight loss? * Are there differences in the above factors between males and females and are there key factors to help improve the outcomes? Participants will be given semaglutide for this study. During the course of the study, participants will: * have two cardiac MRI scans OR two cardiac echocardiograms (one before starting semaglutide and one around 12 months after taking the drug) * have body composition and fitness levels assessed twice (before semaglutide and around 12 months after taking it) and have urine specific gravity (USG) measured * have extra blood drawn when labs their doctor orders are already being drawn (once at the beginning of the study, once around 6 months after enrollment, and once at the end of the study) * have follow up visits with the study doctor * be asked to take a pregnancy test if they are female and have started menstruation
NCT07027553
With advances in genetic therapies, many people with Cystic Fibrosis (CF) are living longer. With the improvement in life expectancy has emerged an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Factors such as insulin resistance, reduced physical activity, rising blood pressure from newer medications, and changes in body mass index have made cardiovascular health a growing concern in CF care. This study aims to assess whether a remotely delivered, monitored exercise programme can increase physical activity levels in adults with CF. Secondary outcomes will explore whether the intervention improves key CVD risk factors. Participants will be randomly assigned to either a control group or an intervention group, which will complete an 8-week home-based aerobic and resistance exercise programme. Exercise intensity will be tailored using the Rate of Perceived Exertion scale. Key outcomes include weekly physical activity levels, body mass index, waist circumference, lung function (spirometry) and blood biomarkers. Home-based capillary blood tests, analysed pre- and post-intervention, will measure cholesterol, lipid profiles, inflammation and other relevant hormones.
NCT00976742
The investigators hypothesize that the degree to which older generally healthy but sedentary men and women improve a number of cardiovascular (CV) disease risk factors with 6 months of highly-standardized endurance exercise training will be a function of common genetic variations in candidate genes.