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Oxidative Stress clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01408680 Completed - Inflammation Clinical Trials

CoQ10 Biomarker Trial

Start date: November 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators believe that relieving the oxidative stress experienced by hemodialysis patients may help improve cardiovascular health. In this study, the investigators hypothesize that administration of coenzyme Q10, as a targeted antioxidant therapy, will ameliorate the excessive oxidative stress experienced by hemodialysis patients. This will lead to improvements in biomarkers of: - oxidative stress status - inflammatory status - endothelial dysfunction

NCT ID: NCT01407484 Completed - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

Male Infertility Related With Post Infection Inflammatory Syndrome

SIGMA
Start date: March 2, 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

BACKGROUND: One couple out of 6 consults for infertility during their sexual life. In 60% of cases a male factor is associated or is the main infertility factor. Inflammatory Syndrome (IS), characterized by the presence of a leukocytospermia is found in 12% of the cases. Leukocyte degranulation causes oxidative stress (OS) through the formation of free radicals attacking the sperm cell functions. HYPOTHESIS: To establish the responsibility of the IS, and OS, in chronicle inflammatory male infertility, the investigators hypothesize that its treatment (as well as its possible cause) must restore or improve the fertilizing capacity of patients sperm. METHODS: This prospective randomized study will test the response to the treatment. The investigators shall measure cellular degradation products due to the OS, thereby certifying that it does have a deleterious effect on sperm cell. Seminal biochemistry will also assess the impact of the syndrome on the genital tract glands and follow its evolution. The patients will be included in the study as soon as the leukocytospermia will be > 0,5*106/ml or as soon as the elastase will be > 500 ng/mL. The examinations will be performed using flow cytometry, CASA (Computer Assisted Semen Analysis). The analysis of sperm morphology will be centralized. Primary endpoint will be a reduction in the percentage of 8OH-dG below 35 %. We anticipate that it should arrive to 20 % of the patients included in the arm treatment by corticosteroid therapy. All in all will thus be needed 50 patients in the group placebo and 50 in the group treated. Secondary endpoint the improvement of the spermatic parameters and the reduction of the fragmentation of the DNA of sperm cells to the treated subjects. All these biological markers will be evaluated 6 month after the treatment: - Fragmentation of the spermatic DNA below 37 % during the follow-up in 6 months - Leukocytospermia and elastase - Seminal biochemistry - Other markers of the inflammatory syndrome and oxidative stress (protein carbonyl, 8OHd-Guanosine) - Possibly the radiological examinations (Ultrasound and MRI of the genital tract) In addition it would allow us to propose a policy of prevention towards acquired post-infectious male infertility.

NCT ID: NCT01386645 Completed - Prediabetes Clinical Trials

Effect of Dietary Glycemic Index on Beta-cell Function

GIdiet
Start date: July 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study will determine if increasing the highs and lows of blood glucose levels (glycemic variability) impairs insulin secretion in people with impaired glucose tolerance and/or impaired fasting glucose who are at risk for developing type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, the study will determine whether changes in beta-cell function are associated with glycemic variability and whether they are mediated by oxidative stress. To decrease or increase glycemic variability the study will provide subjects with special diets containing either low or high glycemic index foods respectively for 4 weeks. To determine if oxidative stress is a mediator, subjects on the high glycemic index diet will take either placebo or the anti-oxidant N-acetylcysteine. The study will address the hypothesis that increased glycemic variability results in increased oxidative stress and thereby exacerbates beta-cell dysfunction in individuals with impaired glucose tolerance and/or impaired fasting glucose. The findings may have important implications for the development of effective strategies aimed at the prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes. In addition, understanding the contribution of dietary glycemic index to beta-cell dysfunction in subjects with pre-diabetes may have a significant public health impact, including changes to dietary counseling and promotion of healthier eating patterns.

NCT ID: NCT01371188 Completed - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

Effects of Exposure to Biomass-burning Air Pollution on Lung Function, Heart Rate Variability and Inflammatory Markers in Sugarcane Workers

Start date: December 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Introduction: Non-mechanized sugar cane harvesting preceded by burning, an important and prevalent professional activity of agribusiness segment of the Brazilian economy, exposes workers and people of neighboring towns to high concentrations of pollutants and, therefore, potentially several risks to health hazards. Objectives: Assessing cardiopulmonary impacts and inflammatory markers in sugarcane workers and volunteers from a nearby town in non-harvest and harvest periods.

NCT ID: NCT01296490 Completed - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

Physical Fitness Effect on the Different Oxidative Stress Measurements

Start date: June 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Physical exercise has many benefits, although it might also have negative impact on the body, which changes in accordance with training level, length of workout, age of subject and their fitness level. These outcomes are governed by complex biological processes, from which Reactive Oxygen Substances (ROS) are considered the most prominent ones during exercise activity. These substances harm muscle activity, and might cause other health related damage by influencing other pathways that engage with free radicals. Excess of ROS, is expressed as Oxidative Stress (OS), pathogenic process activation and aging. With this in mind, it is important to remember that ROS are essential to the investigators bodies as well, especially in gene regulation. Thus they influence proteins that are important for proper muscle function and the immune system. Physical exercise induces changes in low molecular weight antioxidants, and in antioxidant enzymes. According to results that were published in the literature, no universal conclusion can be made regarding physical exercise effect on antioxidants activity. These contradictions might be attributed to the difference between the methods that were used, and their quality. Paradoxically, physical exercise has the same effect on ROS inducement in skeletal muscle fibers as does not using the muscles for a long period of time (especially as a result of handicap). It is well known that physical exercise effect oxidative stress and antioxidant. Due to the doubts that rise from the literature, the investigators think that it is important to test physical fitness effect on oxidative stress biological markers, using various high quality methods, on the same population. The investigators will test healthy men, 20-35 years of age, none smokers with 6-24% fat, who do not take vitamins or supplements. The men will run on a treadmill for 10 minutes to exhaustion, and blood will be taken before the test, 5 minutes after the test, and an hour after the test (checking recovery).

NCT ID: NCT01290458 Completed - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

The Effect of Antioxidant Vitamin Supplementation on Muscle Performance and Redox Status After Eccentric Training

Start date: June 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Consumption of vitamin supplements is a common practice among athletes or people participating in health promoting exercise programs. The reason for this interest in vitamin supplements is primarily because of the observation that enhanced production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) influence fundamental biological processes, such as gene expression, signal transduction and enzyme activity. In a muscle and exercise physiology context, a low level of RONS is required for normal force production, whereas marked increases in RONS can cause contractile dysfunction, resulting in muscle weakness and fatigue. On the other hand RONS are involved in signaling pathways and serve to up-regulate the expression of a number of genes and can exert favorable effects such as training adaptations. The present study will employ a valid eccentric exercise model to examine the influence of combined vitamin C and E supplementation after acute and chronic eccentric exercise on muscle damage and performance, redox status, hemolysis and lipid and lipoprotein profile.

NCT ID: NCT01278589 Completed - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

Antioxidative Effect of Plantago Asiatica L. Extract

Start date: December 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the antioxidant effect of Plantago asiatica L. extract in subjects with mild hyperlipidemia.

NCT ID: NCT01267227 Completed - Blood Pressure Clinical Trials

Effect of Pterostilbene on Cholesterol, Blood Pressure and Oxidative Stress

Start date: December 2010
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Pterostilbene is one of several stilbenes found in certain berries, particularly blueberries, that have demonstrated pre-clinical benefit to cholesterol, blood pressure, and oxidative stress. The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether pterostilbene will help control cholesterol and blood pressure, as well as improve markers for oxidative stress in patients with dyslipidemia meeting inclusion criteria. The investigators also want to look at the safety of pterostilbene in these patients.

NCT ID: NCT01266330 Completed - Inflammation Clinical Trials

Dairy Attenuation of Metabolic Disease

Start date: June 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Forty overweight and obese subjects (BMI 25-39.9) with metabolic syndrome will be randomized to inadequate dairy (<0.5 serving/day) and adequate dairy (3.5 servings/day) weight maintenance (eucaloric) diets for 12 weeks. Body weight will be measured weekly and body composition (via dual X-ray absorptiometry), insulin sensitivity index, plasma lipids and calcitrophic hormones will be measured at weeks 0, 4 and 12 of the dietary intervention. Oxidative burden will be assessed by measurement of plasma malonaldehyde, 8-isoprostane F2α and oxidized LDL and inflammatory stress will be assessed by measurement of IL-6, IL-15, MCP, C-reactive protein, adiponectin and TNF-α levels in plasma at 0, 1, 4 and 12 weeks). An additional global evaluation of diet-induced changes in cytokines will be conducted using cytokine protein arrays to profile relative changes in 36 additional potentially relevant cytokines. All data will be analyzed via two-factor (diet X obesity status) multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA)

NCT ID: NCT01265563 Completed - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

N-Acetylcysteine and Milk Thistle for Treatment of Diabetic Nephropathy

CGDN
Start date: January 2011
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The study is done to find out whether the combined use of the nutritional supplements N-acetylcysteine and Siliphos (milk thistle extract) corrects the shedding of urine protein and oxidative damage (damage to cells and organs often compared to fast aging) in patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) and diabetic kidney disease.