Microbiome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Examining the Effects of Juice Fasting
This study tests the effectiveness of dietary interventions that have the possibility to improve markers of gut health and improve general well-being. This study will allow healthcare professionals to learn how dietary interventions involving fasting can affect health. Food is increasingly recognized as a core component of preventive and ameliorative health care. Juice fasting has quickly become one of the most popular self-prescribed dietary interventions in the United States. A wide variety of juice fasts are available in the popular market; a popular variation is the three-day juice fast. The purpose of this study is to assess the effects of a three-day juice fast on certain markers of age-related disease and bio-markers of longevity. In particular, this study will assess certain epigenetic markers, which measure how the environment (including diet) can change the way that genes are expressed without changing the genes themselves. The study will also assess the microbiome, and inflammatory and glycemic markers.
Up to 30 participants will be enrolled in the study and will be randomized into one of the
three arms: the "juice fasting" arm, the "juice plus ad hoc" arm, and the "caloric
restriction" arm. Participants will come into the lab for an initial visit, during which they
will complete questionnaires on their usual diet and demographics and will be informed about
their assignment to one of the three arms.
In all three arms, the three-day diet intervention will be preceded and followed by three
days of self-conducted elimination diet. The pre-intervention diet will encourage
participants to eat a healthy, light diet for three days (basic instructions: eat only fresh
raw or cooked fruits and vegetables (preferably organic), whole grains and eggs; drink 8
glasses of water a day; avoid or eliminate alcohol, caffeine, sugar, processed foods, dairy,
red meat, and gluten). The post- intervention diet will instruct participants to gradually
return to eating solid foods, and limit strenuous exercise (basic instructions: follow a diet
similar to the pre-intervention elimination diet; day 1 after the intervention: eat fruits &
green vegetables, and drink 8 glasses of water; day 2 add in: nuts, gluten-free grains like
whole oats, quinoa, or brown rice; day 3 add in: organic meats, fish, & gluten-containing
grains).
Biological samples and self-reported outcomes will be collected at four time points: baseline
(prior to the first elimination diet period), pre-intervention (after the elimination diet
and before the three-day intervention), post-intervention (after the intervention), and
14-day post- intervention. At each time point, participants will complete questionnaire on
quality of life (PROMIS - Global Health Scale, which is an NIH measure on an individual's'
overall physical and psychological well-being; see appendix) and collect their stool samples.
Participants will be provided self-administered tool kits and be taught how to collect the
stool sample at their first lab visit. At each of the four time points, the research
assistant will coordinate the collection of cheek swabs, saliva samples, and blood spot
samples. Biometrics will also be collected at each time point (weight, waist circumference,
and blood pressure).
Over the course of the study, participants will be instructed to keep a diet diary days one
through nine to record their daily dietary intake. During the intervention period, the
research team will also contact the participants for daily check-ins. Participants will not
need to record diet data for the remaining 11 days of the post-intervention period.
At the conclusion of the study, participants will bring back the final biological samples
(stool wipe and saliva), provide the set of samples, and be debriefed about the purposes of
the study.
The biological samples collected will then be processed and assayed for microbiome,
methylation, inflammatory markers, and glycemic markers.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03586622 -
One Year Home Monitoring and Treatment of IBS Patients
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04552834 -
Alterations of the Microbiome During Critical Illness With Short and Long Term Clinical Outcomes
|
||
Completed |
NCT03201068 -
Probiotic Supplement and Microbiome, Immune System and Metabolic Syndrome
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04217122 -
Effect of Strawberry Consumption on the Microbiome
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05545631 -
Frozen Embryo Transfer Pregnancy Outcomes Prediction by Microbiome and Transcriptome
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05521295 -
Frozen Embryo Transfer Pregnancy Outcomes Prediction by Microbiome
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05852145 -
Oral Changes With Caloric and no Caloric Sweeteners
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Withdrawn |
NCT04099446 -
A Non-Interventional Pilot Study to Explore the Skin Microbes in Skin Cancer
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05445544 -
A Multicenter Cohort Study on Maternal and Infant Microecology and New Targets for Pre-eclampsia Screening in China
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03213275 -
The Premature Gut Microbiome and the Influence on Neonatal Immunity, Brain Development and White Matter Injury
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05505110 -
MOdification Of THe Early-Life Respiratory Microbiome Through Vaginal SEEDing
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04851340 -
Investigating the Detection of Bovine and Soy Proteins in Human Milk
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06133400 -
Mapping the Health Status of the Population of French Polynesia: the MATAEA Project
|
N/A | |
Withdrawn |
NCT04114513 -
Dietary Fibers Effect on the Gut Microbiota Composition
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05612620 -
Elucidating the Microbiome in Patients With Recurrent Pregnancy Loss
|
||
Completed |
NCT04611945 -
Westlake Sailing Cohort
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04260295 -
Study of the Correlation of Tumor Tissue Microbiome to the Pathogenesis of Lung Cancer
|
||
Completed |
NCT04155684 -
Dysbiosis Impact on Lung Disease in HIV
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT06424691 -
Infant Restore: Efficacy of Microbiome Analysis and Education
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05510050 -
Comparison Study of Manapol and DaltonMax on Immune Function, Microbiome, and Related Variables in Men and Women
|
N/A |