View clinical trials related to Fatty Liver.
Filter by:Identifying patients at risk of NAFLD(Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease), especially severe disease with NASH(nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) and fibrosis, is critical. Prevalence of NAFLD in PLWH(People Living With HIV) evaluated by different imaging techniques including US (ultrasonography), elastography, CT(computed tomography ), and magnetic resonance varies from 13% to 58.6% in all published studies. In previous studies, the effect of ART(Anti-Retroviral Therapy) on NAFLD was limited. A cross-sectional analysis found that INSTI(Integrase strand transfer inhibitor) was associated with a higher prevalence of steatosis in AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) patients. However, it is not clear whether there is a difference in the degree of nonalcoholic steatosis between AIDS patients receiving NNRTI(non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors). Therefore, the investigators plan to conduct a prospective study to assess whether there is any difference in the degree of nonalcoholic steatosis and fibrosis between Chinese HIV(human immunodeficiency virus)/AIDS patients after initial treatment with NNRTI or INSTI, or switching from NNRTI to INSTI.
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the most prevalent chronic liver disease worldwide, paralleling the obesity pandemic. Secondary to increasing rates of obesity in children and adolescents, the prevalence of NAFLD has more than doubled in the last decades and is now the most common pediatric liver disease. At present, lifestyle modification by dietary intervention and increasing physical activity is the mainstay of treatment for pediatric NAFLD. Several studies have shown that lifestyle intervention and weight loss improve non-invasive markers of NAFLD. To the investigator's knowledge, data on fibrosis regression following lifestyle treatment in children and adolescents were lacking. The investigators therefore performed a prospective cohort study to investigate the impact of residential lifestyle treatment on liver steatosis and fibrosis in obese children and adolescents. As a follow-up, the investigators now aim to compare these findings with a cohort of well-characterized patients undergoing multidisciplinary, yet ambulatory, weight loss treatment. As such, the investigators will compare the outcomes in two prospective patient cohorts in this non-randomized observational study.
This trial is a randomized, open label, two-arm, parallel-group, non-used comparator, single center trial to evaluate the efficacy of dapagliflozin in subjects with Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. This is a principal investigator initiate study. This study is supported by Liver Disease Prevention & Treatment Research Foundation. Dapagliflozin will be provided free of charge by AstraZeneca.
In this study the investigators will quantitate hepatic mitochondrial fluxes in T2D patients with NAFL and NASH before and after 16-weeks treatment with the insulin sensitizer pioglitazone
This is a 2 year clinical trial testing an intensive intervention to reduce dietary sugars as a means to prevent non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in pre-pubertal Hispanic children.
VLCKD has showed to be an impactful diet on several metabolism aspects and has proven to be useful for preventing and treating diabetes mellitus type 2, overweight, chronic inflammation and fatty liver. For this reason, the aim of this pilot study is to examinate the potential effect of a VLCKD on a group of patients that contemporarily have DM2, obesity and Non alcholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), comparing the results with an ipocaloric diet based on Mediterranean Principles and Italian LARN (SINU 2014). This study will consider several interrelated outcomes such as anthropometric data, hematochemical and hormonal parameters, questionnaires, stool microbiota and omics, blood microvescicles, urine tests, instrumental tests (DXA, BIVA, ecographies), biopses and functional tests. 40 subjects will be evaluated and divided in two groups of 20 (VLCKD) and 20 (MedDiet).
This will be a 6-month randomized clinical trial with two arms: moderately carbohydrate-restricted diet and a fat-restricted control diet. This 6-month study will have 2 phases: a 12-week controlled feeding phase and a 12-week "free living" phase. During the controlled feeding phase, all food will be provided to the families of the participants for the entirety of the 12 weeks. Participants (n=80) will have been diagnosed with NAFLD based on the presence of current evidence of active disease, which will be determined by the ongoing presence of hepatic steatosis estimated by diffusely echogenic liver via ultrasound suggestive of fatty liver and a serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level of 45 U/L or greater. All participants will be children and adolescents age 10-17 yrs.; will have an HbA1c <7.0; and will be overweight or obese (BMI >85th percentile). It is anticipated that most participants will be sedentary. The investigators will inquire as to routine physical activity at screening. All participants will be asked to maintain their usual level of physical activity throughout the study. Physical activity will be monitored via a smart watch provided to each participant at the beginning of the study, and participants will be queried weekly by the study dietitian regarding changes in physical activity. Participants who use oral contraceptives will be asked to maintain consistent use of these preparations throughout the study. Hormone use will be examined as a potential covariate in statistical analyses.
Increased intestinal permeability and dysbiosis have been causally associated with NAFLD and NASH progression. However, to date, there are no systematic studies, on the effect of bariatric-metabolic surgery on intestinal permeability and dysbiosis in the context of NAFLD development.
Patients with NAFLD indicated for ursodeoxycholic acid treatment ("by SPC: cholestatic hepatitis") will be offered an observational study. Examinations will be performed before the treatment and after 6month period. Laboratory parameters, non-invasive indices, liver elastography, cardiovascular parameters and liver MR spectroscopy will be performed.
This is a prospective/retrospective, observational follow-up study of effects of fatty liver on chronic hepatitis B. Patients will join this study who undergo transient elastography with liver stiffness (LS) and CAP measurements or Ultrasonic examination. All recruited subjects will undergo comprehensive clinical, anthropometric and laboratory assessments at the time when transient elastography or Ultrasonic examination is performed. We plan to compare the relationship between chronic hepatitis B and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Patients will be divided into several groups based on the demand.