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Pediatric Obesity clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Pediatric Obesity.

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NCT ID: NCT03022474 Completed - Childhood Obesity Clinical Trials

Kindergarten-based Intervention for Childhood Obesity in Guangzhou(KICOG)

KICOG
Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Early life interventions for childhood obesity may provide substantial benefits. Most existing studies aimed at school children have reported limited effectiveness, however few have targeted preschool children. This study aimed to pilot procedures for a multifaceted, culturally appropriate intervention for preschool children and to provide a preliminary assessment of effectiveness of the intervention.

NCT ID: NCT03021980 Completed - Child Obesity Clinical Trials

Systems of Underprivileged Preschoolers in Their Home and Preschool EnviRonment: Family Intervention Trial

SuperFIT
Start date: January 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the effectiveness of SuperFIT, an integrative lifestyle intervention for preschool children. It will consist of both an preschool component and a family component and is aimed at increasing healthy nutrition and physical activity. Half of the participating preschools will implement SuperFIT, while the other half of the preschools will continue as usual.

NCT ID: NCT03016247 Completed - Adolescent Obesity Clinical Trials

TRUST Study of Adolescent Weight Self-Management

TRUST
Start date: January 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate the effect of the Trust-building weight Self-management Together (TRUST) intervention on weight self-management behaviors and neural processing in overweight/obese adolescents. Study aims include comparing the effects of the TRUST intervention with Enhanced Usual Care on BMI and quality of life in overweight/obese early adolescents and exploring differences in neural processing (DMT/TPN switching and reward activation).

NCT ID: NCT03014856 Completed - Obesity, Pediatric Clinical Trials

Metabolic Phenotypes in Childhood Obesity

Start date: May 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This study provides a sound basis towards a better understanding of the biochemical mechanisms behind childhood obesity and its metabolic phenotypes, which will be of great importance towards the development of more personalized prevention and treatment in future.

NCT ID: NCT03010644 Completed - Childhood Obesity Clinical Trials

Summer Weight and Environmental Assessment Trial

SWEAT
Start date: May 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The consequences of childhood obesity are devastating, affecting the physical and mental health of children. Disadvantaged school-age children are at risk for unhealthy gains in BMI during the summer months and there is a dearth of information regarding the causal health behaviors and environmental factors. The overall objective of this application is to provide an in depth examination of key dietary and physical activity behaviors as well as the food, physical activity, and social environments of low-income, racial/ethnic school-age children. To achieve this goal, an observational study utilizing a multi-state prospective cohort design will be conducted with the goal of examining the weight gain trajectory among a racially and ethnically diverse convenience sample of disadvantaged school-age children who routinely attend structured programming during the summer months and those who don't participate in structured programming. In addition, a subset of these children will be evaluated to learn their daily health behaviors, as well as their food, physical activity, and social environments during the summer. Identification of determinants of program participation and factors that may enhance the beneficial effects of program participation will also occur. A social ecological framework approach will guide the research. This study can be expected to have a significant positive impact by providing information on the factors that protect disadvantaged children from unhealthy weight gain during the summer which can be used by stakeholders at the local, state, and federal level to reform current policy that will increase child participation in health promoting programming during the summer window of risk.

NCT ID: NCT03004378 Completed - Adolescent Obesity Clinical Trials

Interventions for Adolescent Obesity

Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate whether the short-term use of activity tracking devices improves short-term weight loss in adolescents. The investigators will evaluate whether weight loss translates into a change in obesity-related biomarkers associated with adolescent obesity. In addition, the investigators will report outcomes after the implementation of activity tracking devices in conjunction with an intense adolescent weight loss program.

NCT ID: NCT03003754 Completed - Insulin Sensitivity Clinical Trials

Supervised Exercise-training in Children With Insulin Resistance or Healthy Metabolic Profile

Start date: June 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Despite exercise training decrease blood fasting glycemia in 'average' terms, there is a wide interindividual variability after exercise training explored mainly in adults but not in children. Thus, is yet unknown what baseline health status as well as the influence of what health variable may produce more/less non-responder (NR) prevalence (i.e., percentage of subjects who experienced a non-change/worsened response after training in some metabolic outcomes) after exercise training in school children.

NCT ID: NCT03001167 Completed - Obesity, Childhood Clinical Trials

Microbiome, Antibiotics, and Growth Infant Cohort

MAGIC
Start date: December 9, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This cross-disciplinary study will assemble and longitudinally follow a large, diverse birth cohort to determine the relationships between early life antibiotic exposure, microbiome development, growth, antibodies, and immunostimulation.

NCT ID: NCT02992106 Completed - Clinical trials for Endothelial Dysfunction

Evolution of Maternal Weight During Pregnancy and Influence on the Endothelial Function in Her Offspring

EFFECTOR
Start date: May 10, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The rising worldwide prevalence of obesity and its subsequently rising incidence of concommitant diseases as diabetes and cardiovascular events impose a defiant obstacle for the health care and associated health care costs of future generations. Obese pregnant women are a growing population of interest because their offspring is at risk for childhood obesity, an adverse metabolic and inflammatory profile and possible endothelial dysfunction. However, strong evidence is still lacking regarding the hypotheses on the early origin of these long-term health consequences. Consequently there is no comprehensive data available on the contribution of changing maternal weight through lifestyle interventions or bariatric surgery and an eventual adverse metabolic and endothelial programming of the offspring. The investigators of this study want to provide additional data on the body composition, metabolic and inflammatory state as well as endothelial function of children of obese pregnant women women and compare the outcome with children born from normal weight women. Furthermore, the investigators of this study will stratify the obese pregnant women into 3 groups: women who did not underwent an intervention, women who underwent a weight changing intervention during pregnancy e.g. diet or lifestyle intervention and women who underwent bariatric surgery before pregnancy. The overall aim of the study is to prove that in all the diverse groups of participating children, except the control group, there will be a certain grade of endothelial dysfunction, even if there was a normalization of weight, insulin sensitivity and inflammation before conception or delivery in the mother.

NCT ID: NCT02982759 Completed - Obesity, Childhood Clinical Trials

Together We STRIDE (Strategizing Together Relevant Interventions for Diet and Exercise)

Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Obesity among Hispanic children in the Lower Yakima Valley of Washington State is alarmingly high. This study proposes to implement a comprehensive, multi-level intervention among children, families, the schools, and the community to combat this problem. The two year intervention will be measured by examining changes in children's body mass index.