View clinical trials related to Elevated Blood Pressure.
Filter by:This is a randomized controlled trial comparing the outcomes of treatment and non-treatment of elevated blood pressures in early pregnancy.
This clinical study aims to assess the efficacy of TOTUM-854, a mix of 6 plant extracts, consumed twice a day on automated office blood pressure in subjects with moderately elevated blood pressure. The hypothesis is that TOTUM-854 is superior to placebo for decrease of automated office blood pressure after 12 weeks of consumption.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of Baduanjin on blood pressure in individuals with high normal blood pressure (SBP 130-139 mmHg, and/or DBP 85-89 mmHg), as well as on glucose and lipid metabolism, quality of life, psychology, exercise, immune inflammation, endothelial function, and arterial stiffness.
The main objective of the study will be to compare the efficacy of a 2.65 g/day dose of TOTUM-854 versus placebo in decreasing SBP in subjects with high-normal blood pressure and Grade I hypertension following 12 weeks of daily intake.
This will be a prospective observational study. The population would be pediatric patients 6 years to <19 years of age who were referred for elevated blood pressure to investigate if home blood pressure (HBP) can determine blood pressure phenotype (normotensive, hypertensive, masked hypertension, white coat hypertension) as accurately as ambulatory blood pressure monitor (ABPM) in childhood and adolescence.
GoFresh is a randomized trial, testing the effects of a home-delivered DASH-patterned grocery intervention on blood pressure in Black adults, residing in Boston area urban food deserts.
The goal of this study is to test the efficacy of a behavioral sleep extension intervention on sleep duration, cardio-metabolic disease risk factors, and health behaviors among adults with elevated blood pressure/hypertension and short sleep duration.
This is an ongoing, prospective cohort study of children and young adults who are evaluated in the Reversing the Negative Effects of Weight on the Heart (ReNEW) Clinic at Johns Hopkins University. Demographic and clinical data of patients who agree to participate are obtained via chart review and entered into a longitudinal clinic registry.