View clinical trials related to Obesity, Morbid.
Filter by:This study aims to determine the effect of two types of exercise training on body composition, cardiopulmonary function and quality of life in people after undergoing bariatric surgery.
A study to explore the relationship between early weight loss in the 4 weeks following laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy and outcomes, in terms of weight loss and comorbidity improvement, 7 years following the surgery.
This study is being done to better understand the relationship between inflammation in adipose tissue (AT), abnormal deposition of fat around the liver and how this affects its appearance and function and ultimately insulin resistance.
Weight regain after Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy (LSG) is nowadays a growing concern. Sleeve dilatation and loss of food restriction is considered the main mechanism. The placement of a silicon ring around the gastric tube seems to give benefits in the short-term. The Investigators evaluate the efficacy of banded sleeve gastrectomy compared to standard sleeve in the mid-term. Fifty patients were randomized between LSG and Laparoscopic Banded Sleeve Gastrectomy (LBSG), and they underwent a mean follow-up of 4 years. Patients' management was exactly the same, apart from the band placement. After surgery differences in weight loss, operative time, complication rate and mortality were analyzed.
Pilot multicentre, open-label, parallel-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) of 60 patients to demonstrate the feasibility of enrolling patients with high-risk cardiovascular disease (CVD) into an RCT of bariatric surgery versus medical weight management (MWM).
Obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) are reaching epidemic proportions in the developed world. In morbidly obese patients only surgical treatment (bariatric operations) leads to a sustained weight loss and relief of co-morbidities in the majority of patients. One of the most frequently performed operations is the laparoscopic proximal Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (LRYGB). There is still lack of knowledge why some patients respond much better than others to an identically performed procedure. Therefore, a number of variations of this operation have been introduced over the past 50 years. Increasing the length of small bowel being bypassed has the potential to improve the effect of the operation but buries the risk of nutrient deficiencies. The metabolic effect of LRYGB occurs, in part, independently of weight loss. The mechanisms underlying metabolic improvement through metabolic surgery are not yet fully understood.
The overarching goal of this research is to assess whether the post-operative use of closed-incision Negative Pressure Therapy (ciNPT) accelerates healing of surgical wounds, improves surgical outcomes, and reduces the rate of local complications in high-risk, obese, post-bariatric patients undergoing abdominal body-contouring procedures (abdominal panniculectomy or "abdominoplasty") compared to standard wound care. The investigators postulate that ciNPT can cost-effectively improve outcomes and standard of post-surgical care in this specific category of patients. This hypothesis will be tested through a prospective, interventional, case-control, randomized clinical trial.
The goal of this study is to determine the relationship between esophageal pressure (Pes) and superimposed pressure (SP) in subjects with morbid obesity.
Assess the effectiveness of utilization of endoscopically placed intra-gastric balloon in obese and morbid obese adolescents combined with behavioral support for weight loss and health optimization.
This study aims to assess safety and efficacy of bariatric embolization of the gastro-epiploic arcade using 300-500 micrometres calibrated polyvinyl-alcohol microparticles, for patients with morbid obesity.