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Overnutrition clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01435603 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

Intervening in Diabetes With Healthy Eating, Activity, and Linkages To Healthcare - The I-D-HEALTH Study

I-D-HEALTH
Start date: August 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare ways of giving advice and providing support to improve diet and physical activity in adult primary care patients with elevated body mass index and dysglycemia.

NCT ID: NCT01224561 Completed - Lipid Overnutrition Clinical Trials

Adaptation of Lipid and Energy Metabolism During a Lipid Overnutrition in Constitutional Thinness

Surnutrition
Start date: March 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

For a given food intake, fat and energy metabolism in adipose tissue and muscle adapt to nutrient intakes. This adaptation to nutrition may be impaired in susceptible individuals or in obese patients by promoting weight gain, either in constitutional thinness (MC) by blocking it. The MC is a little known entity. These patients wish to grow for her and others. Can they? We have demonstrated abnormalities of hormones regulating appetite (ghrelin, PYY, GLP1 and leptin) that may participate in thinness. Furthermore, this thinness is associated with osteoporosis in 25% of true MC who is 25 years old.

NCT ID: NCT00459992 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

Effects of Betahistine Hydrochloride in Overweight Women

Start date: April 10, 2007
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the effects of a drug called betahistine on appetite and food intake in overweight women. Betahistine has been used for many years to treat vertigo (dizziness). It was taken off the market in the United States in 1970 because it was thought to be ineffective for vertigo, but is still used for this purpose in many other countries. Some research suggests that betahistine may reduce appetite and food intake. Healthy overweight women between 18 and 50 years of age may be eligible for this study. Candidates must have a body mass index (BMI) between 30 and 40 and weigh less than 300 pounds. They are screened with a medical history and physical examination, blood and urine tests, electrocardiogram (EKG), breathing test and eating behavior questionnaires. Participants are admitted to the NIH Clinical Center for a 3-day/2-night stay for the following procedures: - Medication: Subjects take either betahistine (in one of three possible doses) or placebo capsules one time on the days of admission to the Clinical Center (day 1), three times on day 2 and two times on day 3. - Blood tests and 24-hour urine collection. - Resting metabolic rate: Subjects rest quietly for 1 hour after awakening and then rest again under a clear plastic hood or while wearing a face mask, breathing normally for about 25 minutes. - DEXA scan to measure body fat, muscle, and bone mineral content: Subjects lie on a table above a source of X-rays while a very small dose of X-rays is passed through the body. - Meal studies: Subjects food intake is measured on days 2 and 3. - Questionnaires: Subjects complete questionnaires about how hungry or full they are feeling and rate how much they liked the foods they ate.