View clinical trials related to Overweight.
Filter by:This study will be comparing human body responses by the effects of diets cooked with NoveLin, virgin olive oil and RBD coconut oil.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effects of canagliflozin and phentermine to those of placebo to promote on a change in body weight over a 26 week period.
This trial is conducted in the United States of America (USA). The aim of the trial is to investigate safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics (the exposure of the trial drug in the body) for single doses of NNC9204-0530 alone and in combination with liraglutide in overweight to obese but otherwise healthy male subjects.
Excessive weight gain during pregnancy, particularly in overweight and obese women, predisposes to adverse perinatal outcomes and has long term effects on maternal and neonatal health. With an inverse relationship between socioeconomic status and obesity, significant health disparities exist between obese and normal weight women. The Institute of Medicine (IOM) recently revised its gestational weight gain recommendations, targeted to pregravid body mass index (BMI), to minimize pregnancy complications. However, these recommendations are based on cross sectional observational studies and neither the ideal method to achieve weight gain goals nor whether perinatal outcome is optimized with active management of weight gain is known. The investigators propose to investigate a behavioral incentive-based intervention to improve compliance with IOM weight gain recommendations during pregnancy in low-income overweight and obese women. The investigators will evaluate if 1) gestational weight gain can be reliably targeted to the IOM recommendations and 2) active weight gain management during pregnancy improves perinatal outcomes. Two study groups will be compared in a prospective randomized trial; 1) those receiving standard obstetrical care and 2) those receiving behavioral weight management counseling plus financial incentives for achieving weight gain goals. The main outcome measure will be the percentage of women gaining within the IOM recommendations based on prepregnancy BMI. Secondary outcomes evaluated will include fetal growth and body composition changes, birth weight and the rate of cesarean delivery. The investigators hypothesize that 1) the behavioral intervention with incentives will result in greater compliance to IOM guidelines for gestational weight gain than standard care and 2) targeting weight gain to the IOM guidelines will lead to a reduction in the rates of fetal macrosomia and cesarean delivery. Finally, cost effectiveness of treatment conditions will be examined. This intervention, if efficacious and cost-effective, has the potential to improve compliance with gestational weight gain guidelines, optimize perinatal outcomes, and reduce health disparities.
The purpose of this study is to conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the efficacy of brief cognitive behavioral treatment for child sleep (CBTcs) to improve sleep in an important high-risk population, overweight/obese (OV/OB) youth with behavioral sleep disorders. OV/OB youth with behavioral sleep disorders and their parent(s) will be randomly assigned to 8 sessions of either CBTcs or an Educational Control (EC). CBTcs will address behavioral sleep issues in children; EC will address sleep and dietary education and general coping strategies. Child sleep (total wake time, total sleep time, bed/wake times), height, weight, physical activity, dietary intake, quality of life (QOL), fatigue, and daytime sleepiness will be assessed at baseline, post-treatment, and 3-month follow-up. It is hypothesized the children in the CBTcs will experience greater improvement in sleep than children in the EC.
The purpose of this study is to measure the effects of a reduced-calorie low energy density diet with and without increased cognitive dietary restraint (CDR) on stress (biological markers and perceived stress), eating behaviours, appetite sensations, anthropometric variables and women's attitude toward their children's eating behaviours in premenopausal overweight/obese women in both the short term (immediately after the end of the 4-week intervention) and longer term (3 months after the end of the intervention). The investigators hypothesize that cortisol concentrations are higher, appetite sensations are increased (i.e. increased global appetite score) and food cravings are more prevalent in women of the energy-restriction-plus-CDR group than in women of the energy-restriction-without-CDR group after the 4-week intervention. They also hypothesize that perceived stress is higher and food cravings are more prevalent in women of the energy-restriction-plus-CDR group than in women of the energy-restriction-without-CDR group at 3-month post intervention. They hypothesize that no significant difference in body weight changes is observed between the two groups and that maternal restriction of their child's eating is higher in the energy-restriction-plus-CDR group than in the energy-restriction-without-CDR group both after the 4-week intervention and at the 3-month follow-up.
The main purpose of this study is measure the effect of VI-0521 on kidney function. Specifically, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) will be measured at baseline, after 4 weeks of study treatment, and after an additional 4 weeks of off-treatment recovery.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of a multicomponent school-based intervention based on Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory targeting healthy eating and physical activity for high school adolescent girls from low-income communities in the city of São Paulo, Brazil.
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel study aims to determine the 6-week and acute effects of daily administration of a citrus flavonoid on cardiovascular and intestinal health as assessed by investigation of endothelial function, blood pressure and heart rate, glucose/insulin metabolism, lipid profile and gut barrier function in overweigh subjects. Futhermore we aim to relate the specific intestinal (microbial) metabolism with final serum levels of specific metabolites of the study product.
The purpose of this study is to explore the effect of 8-weeks use of the Medidata Patient Cloud (a mobile application for capturing data directly from subjects, enabling entry of diary and quality of life data into internet-enabled devices) in combination with an activity tracker (Fitbit Flex) on health outcomes in overweight people with Type 2 Diabetes.