View clinical trials related to Endothelial Dysfunction.
Filter by:The SARS-CoV2 pandemic and resulting COVID-19 infection has led to a large increase in the number of patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). ARDS is a severe, life-threatening medical condition characterised by inflammation and fluid in the lungs. There is no proven therapy to reduce fluid leak, also known as pulmonary oedema, in ARDS. However, recent studies have discovered that imatinib strengthens the cell barrier and prevents fluid leak in the lungs in inflammatory conditions, while leaving the immune response intact. The investigators hypothesize that imatinib limits pulmonary oedema observed in ARDS due to COVID-19, and may thus help to reverse hypoxemic respiratory failure and to hasten recovery. The hypothesis will be tested by conducting a randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled multi-centre clinical study of intravenous imatinib in 90 mechanically-ventilated, adult subjects with COVID-19-related ARDS. Study participants will receive the study drug (imatinib or placebo) twice daily for a period of 7 days. The effect of the intervention will be tested by measuring extravascular lung water (i.e. pulmonary oedema) difference between day 1 and day 4, using a PiCCO catheter (= pulse contour cardiac monitoring device). Other measurements will include regular blood tests to investigate the safety and the pharmacokinetic properties of imatinib, as well as biomarkers of inflammation and cellular dysfunction. Furthermore, parameters of ventilation and morbidity and mortality will be recorded as secondary outcome measures.
This study aims to investigate the effect of interrupting a three hour bout of prolonged sitting with high intensity interval exercise on lower limb blood vessel function in adolescents before and after a mixed meal challenge.
This study will investigate the metabolic alterations of vascular cells caused by sepsis and septic shock
The pilot study is designed to investigate the acute and chronic effects of the diet supplement tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA) on endothelial function in participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
This study will investigate the relationship between resistance training load and repetitions on cardiometabolic outcomes. The primary objective of this clinical trial is to determine whether high load or low load resistance exercise training affects arterial stiffness in overweight or obese men and women. Our secondary objectives are to investigate the effects of high and low load RT on vascular function, cardiac structure, and markers of insulin sensitivity. Finally, we are going to preliminarily explore the effects of resistance training on intestinal bacteria.
Hookah (water pipe) smoking is a new global epidemic. The World Health Organization wants to prohibit all claims that hookah is less harmful than cigarettes and wants hookah products to bear the same warning labels as cigarettes. But there is little scientific evidence to substantiate this proposal. Cigarettes, cigars, medicinal nicotine, and e-cigarettes all acutely impair brachial artery endothelial function (flow-mediated dilation, FMD). Also, cigarettes cause both acute and chronic impairment in coronary endothelial function, but the comparative effects of hookah are unknown. Hookah tobacco is heated with burning charcoal. So, the smoke contains "tar" and nicotine plus charcoal combustion products. These include carbon monoxide (CO) and proatherogenic oxidants (especially carbon-rich nanoparticles) that the study team expected to impair endothelial function.
This study is to compare the safety and efficacy of UCMSCs and BMMSCs administered intravenously in patients to evaluate cytokine suppression in patients with chronic inflammation. Cells administered via intravenous infusion (IV) and will be tested in 37 patients in two phases (Pilot and Randomized).
The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of bosentan on the myocardial metabolism and the dependent endothelial coronary vasomotoricity in patients presenting a PAH. Hypothesis : Bosentan may improve right ventricular function by decreasing myocardial stress and glucose metabolism. Patients may benefit from images with 18F-FDG PET / CT and 82Rb PET / CT for an earlier assessment and optimal management of PAH.
This pilot study will examine the effectiveness of vitamin D supplementation on reducing blood pressure and improving endothelial function. Premenopausal African American women will be recruited. Participants will be instructed to record food intake for three days to estimate usual dietary intake at baseline and at the 10th week. At the baseline clinic visit a 10 week supply of vitamin D3 supplements (2,000 IU/day; Nature Made ®) will be given to participants and log sheets provided to record supplement intake. To answer the primary research questions, within subjects repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) tests will be conducted to test if any differences in blood pressure, serum 25(OH)D concentrations, and RHI are statistically different after 10 weeks of supplementation with 2,000 IU/d of vitamin D. Exploratory multivariate linear regression models will be constructed to determine relationships between vitamin D status and vascular function parameters (blood pressure, RHI) before and after adjustment for age and BMI.
The purpose of this study are twofold: 1. To understand the effects of physical inactivity (sedentarism) on vascular function, insulin resistance and inflammation; 2. To assess the role of a dietary intervention (fish oil) in counteracting the effects of physical inactivity on vascular function and inflammation.