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Diet Habit clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05612997 Not yet recruiting - Diet Habit Clinical Trials

ZOE-AFFIRM: Relative Validation of a Novel Food Frequency Questionnaire

Start date: November 8, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Dietary assessment is critical for dietary research. Food Frequency Questionnaires (FFQ) measure habitual dietary intake and are low user and researcher burden. The ZOE AFFIRM study aims to assess the relative validity of a novel FFQ compared to a widely accepted 24h dietary recall tool in a remote setting.

NCT ID: NCT04827290 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Kidney Failure, Chronic

Assessment of the Effect of Restriction on Alimentary AGE in Progression of Chronic Kidney Disease

CKD AGE
Start date: August 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Normal-protein and low-AGE through raw or rare proteins diet versus normal-protein and high-AGE diet in stage IIIa-b renal failure patients

NCT ID: NCT04634851 Not yet recruiting - Diet Habit Clinical Trials

Video Home Visits for Dietary Counselling

Start date: July 1, 2027
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This pilot study aims to develop a protocol for home video informed dietary counseling with the goal of reducing overall sodium consumption among kidney stone formers. To accomplish this the investigators will: 1)Assess which data available on video visits are most informative to convey patient sodium consumption, and 2) Administer virtual home visits with informed dietary counseling in our intervention arm and compare this to standard dietary counseling looking specifically at the outcome of 24-hour urine sodium excretion results over time. This study will benefit dramatically from the rapid growth of telehealth medical visits as a consequence of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, with the ultimate goal to improve and adapt patient dietary counseling for the prevention of kidney stone disease in the new and evolving era of telehealth.

NCT ID: NCT04417504 Not yet recruiting - Diet Habit Clinical Trials

Metabolic and Prolonged Satiety Effects of a Breakfast Kit

Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The mobilizing programme MobFood - mobilizing scientific knoweledge and technology to answer the current nutrition market challenges - is formed by a consortium of 47 collaborative entities, between the industry and ENESIIs (Entidades Não Empresariais do Sistema de Investigação e Inovação) and is financed by Structural European Funds of Investment. The project is currently investigating and undertaking collaborative scientific and technological strategies based on R&D and innovation, in order to boost and promote a more competitive national food industry, capable of overcoming the current challenges, including those of the Millennial Generation. This group is particularly conscious of the impact of food behaviour and food choices on health but extremely vulnerable to dietary imbalance. Strategies to improve Millenials' nutrition while providing conscious food products are needed. This study is a randomised, cross-over controlled trial designed to test the metabolic effect, particularly in terms of appetite control and glycaemic response of a breakfast kit (nutritionally balanced and innovative), recently developed as part of the collaborative project MobFood_PPS4.

NCT ID: NCT04038281 Not yet recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Genetics of Bitter and Fat Taste

Start date: August 15, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Obesity is an increasing problem for adults in the UK. Diets high in fat and sugar are the major contributors to weight gain. Individual differences in taste perception are a crucial factor in determining the investigator's choice of foods and an individual's sensitivity to the either bitter or fat taste compounds has been linked to a preference for different foods including sweet and high fat foods. Previous research has not comprehensively explored the effect of both fat and bitter taste sensitivity on dietary intake and obesity status. Therefore, the aim of this study is to explore the associations between genetics, fat and bitter taste sensitivity, food preference, dietary intake and obesity measures in the adult UK population.