View clinical trials related to Vitamin K Deficiency.
Filter by:Migraine is a debilitating illness and a major cause of disability in the world. It is highly prevalent, especially among women. Vitamin supplementation is a potential therapeutic option for migraines that remains largely under-explored. Several studies have shown that people with migraine tend to have higher arterial stiffness than people without migraine. Vitamin K2 deficiency is an important mediator of arterial stiffness and calcification due to decreased carboxylation of matrix Gla protein (MGP). Supplementation reverses these changes and improves vascular health in patients with end stage renal disease according to previous studies. Therefore, vitamin K2 supplementation could serve a potential role in migraine patients. The purpose of the study is to test the effect of vitamin K2 on decreasing the frequency of migraine attacks and decreasing arterial stiffness. The population will be recruited from the neurology clinic at LAU Medical Center-Rizk Hospital and will constitute of adult patients. They will be randomized to receive either the supplement of vitamin K2 or a placebo for the duration of 6 months. Laboratory tests and arterial stiffness measurements will be done at the beginning, middle, and at the end of the study for comparison.
VIKIPEDIA is a multi-centre, placebo-controlled, randomized, open-label intervention clinical trial on Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) patients. At baseline the investigators will recruit End-Stage Renal Disease patients undergoing PD and randomize them to either daily per os supplementation of 1mg menaquinone-7 or placebo for 1.5 year. The investigators will study the effect of vitamin K2 supplementation (through normalization of dp-ucMGP) on arterial stifness and the occurence of cardiovascular events. The investigators will also cosider as secondary endpoints, mortality, central aortic blood pressure and indices of 24h-ambulatory blood pressure.