View clinical trials related to Oxidative Stress.
Filter by:D2 dopaminergic receptor blockers, used to treat schizophrenia, can lead to the onset of movement disorders. Drug-induced movement disorders encompass several syndromes. Parkinsonism, dystonia, dyskinesia and akathisia are the most prevalent. All of them lead to poor adherence to the treatment instituted, decrease in the quality of life, relapses and hospitalizations. The pathophysiology of drug-induced movement disorders is complex and poorly understood, but seems to be associated with oxidative stress, as a result of an increase in free radicals generated from dopamine metabolism. Treatment strategies following the onset of drug-induced movement disorders include neuroleptic discontinuation, use of atypical antipsychotics and anticholinergics. A pre-clinical study showed that the antioxidant properties of vitamins B6 and B12, alone or in combination, prevented the development of orofacial dyskinesia induced by haloperidol. This clinical trial aims to evaluate the effects of vitamins B6 and B12 on the treatment of patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, schizoaffective or bipolar disorder who present with tardive dyskinesia, dystonia and parkinsonism.
Schizophrenia is a devastating mental disorder with a prevalence of approximately 1% worldwide. While effective in reducing positive symptoms, current treatments have limited effects on cognitive and social cognition/processing deficits of schizophrenia, which are closely linked to real-world dysfunction and lack of socio-occupational integration. There is compelling evidence for impaired antioxidant defense system and inflammatory abnormalities in schizophrenia. A new therapeutic approach to the disease might well be to hinder oxidative damage, inflammation and its clinical sequelae. Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) is a naturally occurring compound, synthesized in the mitochondria, that is currently approved to treat diabetic neuropathic pain. Drug repurposing is a fast, and cost-effective method that can overcome drug discovery challenges of targeting neuropsychiatric disorders. In a pilot investigation, adjunctive treatment with ALA led to robust improvement in negative and cognitive symptoms of ten patients with schizophrenia. This project aims to investigate the efficacy of ALA as a disease-modifying drug for the treatment of schizophrenia, by improving sociability and cognition, as well as to correlate patients' response with biomarkers that will shed light on the pathophysiology of this complex disease. It comprises 1) a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate efficacy of ALA to treat cognitive and negative symptoms of patients with schizophrenia and 2) an investigation of changes in biomarkers of oxidative stress in response to adjunctive treatment with ALA. The proposed study could establish a new adjunctive treatment for schizophrenia, recognize a novel pharmacological approach and help unveil the biological basis of the disease.
A randomized crossover trial will be conducted in 90 primary school children in 3 classrooms in Shanghai, China. The effects of fresh air ventilation/filtration system, fresh air ventilation system with no filtration and natual ventilation will be compared on the effects of reducing indoor PM2.5 and chilhood health. Biological samples of children are going to be collected to investigate the associations between indoor air pollution and biomarkes of certain health effects.
Primary aim is to evaluate the effect of blood transfusion on oxidant-antioxidant status in premature neonates. Secondary aim is to assess the effect of the age of transfused red blood cells on the biological markers of oxidative stress.
The present study will investigate the effect of acute exercise on fasting and postprandial risk markers for coronary heart disease (CHD) in healthy male cigarette smokers and non-smokers. Participants will complete two, 2-day trials in a random crossover design separated by an interval of at least 1 week. On day 1, participants will rest (control) or complete 60 minute of treadmill exercise at 60% of maximum oxygen uptake (exercise). On day 2, participants will rest and consume two high fat meals (breakfast and lunch) over an 8-h period during which 13 venous blood samples and nine blood pressure measurements will be taken at pre-determined intervals. It is hypothesised that men who smoke cigarettes will exhibit impaired fasting and postprandial metabolic risk markers compared to non-smokers, but a single bout of exercise will be equally, if not more, efficacious for improving the CHD risk factor profile in smokers than non-smokers.
The present study will investigate the effect of prior walking on postprandial metabolism and endothelial function in healthy South Asian and White European women. Participants will complete two, 2-day trials in a random, crossover design separated by at least 3 weeks to control for the menstrual cycle phase. On day 1, participants will either rest or complete a 60 minute walk at 60% maximal oxygen uptake. On day 2, participants will arrive at 08:00 having fasted overnight and a baseline venous blood sample and endothelial function measurement will be taken. Participants will consume a high-fat breakfast and lunch and 12 subsequent venous blood samples will be taken throughout the day at standardised intervals to measure a variety of coronary heart disease risk markers. A second endothelial function measurement will be completed 2 hours after the breakfast. Blood pressure will be measured every hour. It is expected that the South Asian participants will have impaired metabolism and endothelial function compared to their European counterparts but the bout of exercise performed on day 1 will mitigate these responses.
This study aims to evaluate whether dietary supplementation with fish oil can protect against the cardiopulmonary effects induced by ozone exposure.
Hookah (water-pipe) tobacco smoking has quickly grown to become a major global tobacco epidemic among youth; with electronic (e-) hookahs more recently increasing in popularity especially among young female adults, who endorse marketing claims that these products are a safer alternative to traditional hookah, but scientific evidence is lacking. The study aims to elucidate the comparative effects of traditional hookah smoking vs. e-hookah vaping on human vascular and endothelial function; and examine the role of inflammation and oxidative stress, as likely mechanisms in hookah-related cardiovascular disease pathogenesis.
The aim of the study is to investigate the effect of preoperative epidural dexmedetomidine compared to dexamethasone on postoperative pain control, analgesic consumption and oxydative stress response in patients undergoing thoracic surgery
The absence of sperms in ejaculated semen, is the most severe form of male-factor infertility and is present in approximately 5 % of all investigated infertile couples.