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A clinical trial that uses personal digital assistants (PDAs) to assist in examining the relationship between self reported stress, an objective biochemical indicator of stress (salivary alpha amylase) and self-reported dietary lapse among type 2 diabetic adults who are interested/undergoing in weight loss.
In the study, all participants will be provided with a personalized ADA-based diet plan and a pre-programmed PDA. They will be required to record their mood and activities into the PDA whenever PDA prompts, they break their diet plan, and/or and face significant stress. They will also be required to collect saliva samples periodically. In addition to this they will be administered the Trier Social Stress Test once during the study, where they will perform certain stress inducing tasks like delivering a speech and solving maths problems. Salivary samples will be collected before and after these tasks. They will also take various questionnaires during each of the 15 to 16 visits. The completed questionnaires, PDA records and reports of salivary alpha amylase levels will be analyzed to examine the corelation between stress, dietary lapse and weight loss.
Age
21 - 65 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Start Date
March 1, 2009
Primary Completion Date
July 1, 2010
Completion Date
July 1, 2012
Last Updated
August 2, 2012
70
ESTIMATED participants
Personalized diet plan and PDA self reporting.
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Collaborators
NCT07472881
NCT01143454
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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