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Optical Tomography clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05449782 Completed - Clinical trials for Healthy Participants

Macro- and Microvascular Response to Cocoa Flavanols in Healthy and Type 2 Diabetes

Start date: May 17, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The greatest challenge in our ageing society are cardiovascular diseases such as stroke, heart attack, peripheral artery disease of the legs with non-healing wounds (ulcers), or diabetes. Specific diets with high polyphenol content are associated with lower incidence of cardiovascular disease and can improve macrovascular function when consumed acutely and chronically. Which role the smallest blood vessels (microcirculation) play in this and if the microcirculation responds to therapies is not well understood. One reason for this is that no generally available medical instrument has the resolution to study the microcirculation. The recently developed optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA), currently mainly used by eye doctors, is able to visualise the microcirculation. The current randomised controlled cross-over proof-of-concept study will test the acute effect of a cocoa flavanol intervention on cutaneous microvascular structure and function of hands and feet together with macrovascular function of upper and lower extremities in healthy and type 2 diabetes participants. It is the hypothesis that cocoa flavanol intervention as compared to placebo can acutely increase microvascular vasodilation and macrovascular endothelial function in arms and legs together with arterial stiffness in both healthy and type 2 diabetes participants.

NCT ID: NCT01115881 Completed - Optical Tomography Clinical Trials

Relationship Between Macular Thickness Measurement and Signal Strength in Optical Coherence Tomography

Start date: May 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Signal strength is a parameter introduced in analysis software version 4.0.1, of the OCT stratus, that combines SNR and uniformity of the signal within a scan The scale of signal strength ranges from 1 to 10, with 1 representing poor image quality and 10 representing excellent image quality It has been showed that signal strength has a better image quality discriminating ability than SNR The operation manual recommends a minimum signal strength of 5 for macular thickness measurement There is no consensus on the level of signal strength above which should be considered to be good quality The inclusion Criteria for acceptable signal strength varies widely in the literature the purpose of our study is to examine the relationship between signal strength and macular thickness measured by stratus OCT