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Healthy Individuals clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02101801 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Urine Drug Levels Related to Source of Water for Irrigation for Vegetable Crops Among Healthy Israeli Volunteers

Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Over 60% of crops in Israel are grown in recycled treated waste water. This study aims to determine whether minute quantities of drugs such as Carbamazepine can be found in individuals who ingest vegetables grown in waste water.

NCT ID: NCT02096796 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Arm Pump in Motorcross Training

Start date: April 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Arm Pump is a sport specific term drivers use to describe Acute or Chronic Compartment Syndrome of the forearm. Drivers experience pain in the forearms due to increased blood pressure in forearm muscle compartments. No strategies nor methods have been used to diminish the risk to suffer from arm pump within motor cross. This project aims to look at ergonomics of driving and its relationship with the occurrence of arm pump. The investigators will first investigate the experience of motor cross athletes with arm pump through motor cross federations in Belgium and The Netherlands (survey). Two groups of athletes will be selected (20 persons within each group) who will be invited to the motor cross track to investigate their hand grip strength, motor driving position, muscle activity.

NCT ID: NCT02091427 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Circadian Variation of Cardiac Troponin

Start date: January 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is defined by an increase and/or decrease in the concentration of cardiac troponin, with at least one value above the 99th percentile value of the reference population together with evidence of ischemia. An objective tool to determine the magnitude of the cardiac troponin change is the use of reference change values (RCV). The basis for this tool is that, for a change to be significant, the difference in serial results must be greater than the inherent variation in two test results. The inherent variation of a laboratory test result is composed of analytical and within-subject biological variation. An important requirement to use RCVs is that the concentrations of cardiac troponins fluctuate randomly around a homeostatic set point in cardio-healthy individuals. Verification of this important condition has never been performed, and violation of this condition would preclude the use of RCV's in clinical practice.

NCT ID: NCT01876160 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Analysis of Sensory and Motor Thresholds During Transcutaneous Electrical Stimulation in Different Sexes and Ages

Start date: March 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The sensory and motor perception thresholds can influence the therapeutic effects of Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation. This study aimed to determine the threshold of sensory perception and the threshold of motor response in young and elderly subjects of both sexes. Eighty healthy volunteers were evaluated; 40 women and 40 men divided into two equal groups of young and elderly subjects. Half of the individuals in each group were stimulated with 5 and 50Hz frequency, with pulse duration of 20, 100, 400, 1000 and 3000µs applied on the flexor muscle bellies of the wrist and fingers. The threshold of sensory perception was identified as the first sensation of increased current intensity and the threshold of motor response as the minimum muscle contraction detected. The results were submitted to ANOVA test, followed by the Tukey test, with a significance level of 5%.

NCT ID: NCT01872117 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Assessment of Temperature by Infrared Thermography and Blood Conduction Velocity by Doppler After Applying Shortwave Diathermy and Microwave - Correlations With Cardiovascular and Hemodynamic Parameters

Start date: May 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The deep heat therapies are increasingly frequent in daily physical therapist for the treatment of musculoskeletal diseases. The use of such procedures is justified by their analgesic, anti-inflammatory, antiespasmolíticos and hiperemiantes. However, studies on the cardiovascular effects of these therapies are still incipient. Therefore, this study has as objectives: map the skin temperature changes in the lower limbs in different areas and positions after applying shortwave diathermy and microwave; assess hemodynamic and autonomic cardiovascular parameters, and investigate the occurrence of changes in conduction velocity superficial blood resulting from the application of these thermal features. The study will be conducted on 40 female volunteers between 18 and 30 years, university, healthy, that fit the inclusion and exclusion criteria of the study. The analysis by infrared thermography will be held in a room with temperature maintained at 23 ± 1°C and humidity average 50%. The volunteers will stay in prone position, with the legs bare, resting for 20 min to stabilize skin temperature with temperature of the room. After this period will be held applying diathermy of shortwave or microwave for 20 minutes at moderate heat on the lower limb regions of the hamstrings and triceps surae in extension and flexion to 180° to 90°. The records beat to beat blood pressure and heart rate to autonomic and cardiovascular hemodynamic evaluation will be performed by means of equipment Finometer (Finapress Medical Systems, Inc.) and electrocardiogram (ADInstruments, Inc.), respectively, before and after application of diathermy. On the other hand, the images will be processed using FLIR ThermoScan and blood flow data will be collected through the Doppler ultrasound. The results will be processed and analyzed using descriptive statistics, submitted to a linear regression model with mixed effects (random effects and fixed), with p≤0.05.

NCT ID: NCT01835717 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Study for Cognitive and Genetic Characterization of a 45-65 Years Old Population

Start date: April 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Before Alzheimer's disease (AD) clinical symptoms appear, there is a long period when changes in the brain occur. In this long asymptomatic period or preclinical phase, studies with populations at risk of developing AD have shown cognitive differences compared to control groups without such risk. There is a need for short, sensitive, easily administered, reproducible, non-expensive and independent of socio-demographic influences tests enabling the detection of pre-symptomatic variations in memory, when the memory decline is still within a normal range. Study main hypothesis: When evaluated with high-demanding tests of memory and executive function, the cognitive performance of cognitive healthy people aged between 45 and 65 and, extensively, to a group of up to 75 years, will vary significantly depending on clinical, socio-demographic and genetic features

NCT ID: NCT01568541 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Fluoride Intake From Toothbrushig With Children's or Regular Toothpastes

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Start date: October 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

There are controversial data about fluoride intake by children when tooth brushing with children's or regular toothpastes. However, a study have showed that children were exposed to a dose of 0.051 mg F/Kg/day and 0.046 mg F/kg/day by tooth brushing with children's and and regular toothpaste, respectively. Fluorides doses were too close and is questioned if there is a real clinical relevance in terms of risk of dental fluorosis. It is important to evaluate if children's toothpastes does really represent a risk of fluoride intake when compared to the regular toothpastes in terms of risk of dental fluorosis. The hypothesis is that both children's and regular toothpastes can represente risks of development of dental fluorosis and can represent similar fluoride exposure by children.

NCT ID: NCT01320969 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Could Meditation Modulate the Neurobiology of Learning Not to Fear?

Start date: December 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

It is well-established that the practice of mindfulness meditation leads to improvements in mental health and well-being and the cultivation of positive emotions. However, the neural mechanisms of these improvements are largely unknown. A few recent studies suggest that mindfulness meditation impacts the structure and function of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, the hippocampus, and the amygdala. Interestingly, recent studies have shown that these regions are part of a brain circuit that is critical for the extinction of conditioned fear responses, and for the retention of fear extinction memory. Building on the overlap of these regions and on conceptual considerations, the project investigates whether mindfulness meditation could influence one's capacity to retain the memory of fear extinction. Meditation-naïve participants will be randomized to either a mindfulness-meditation based training or an active control training that controls for all mindfulness-unspecific components. Participants will undergo a fear conditioning, extinction and extinction recall protocol in an MRI scanner before and after the trainings. We hypothesize that participants who have practiced mindfulness meditation will show greater improvements in fear extinction memory after the course, and that these improvements will be correlated with anatomical and functional changes in the brain regions of interest. Improvements in fear extinction memory will also be related to improvements in self-reported psychological well-being. Merging the fields of an ancient spiritual tradition and a fundamental learning mechanism, the project investigates the underlying neural mechanisms of a practice for the enhancement of mental health and well-being.

NCT ID: NCT01211717 Completed - Type 2 Diabetes Clinical Trials

The Effects of Orally Ingesting Branched Chained Amino Acids on Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness in Diabetic Patients

Start date: October 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of the 3 Branched Chained Amino Acids (isoleucine, leucine, and valine) on treating Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness, a type of muscle pain which usually develops after exercising.

NCT ID: NCT01168102 Completed - Healthy Individuals Clinical Trials

Noninvasive Blood Ethanol Measurement With Infrared Spectroscopy

Start date: March 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The objective of this study is to assess the performance of a noninvasive device for the detection of blood alcohol levels.