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Browse 4,967 clinical trials for obesity. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT04854252
Anesthetic agents, including opioids can modulate the altered immune function in patients with obesity through mechanisms that involve the expression and release of cytokines. For this reason, anesthetic care in patients with obesity remains controversial. Therefore, the aim of the study was to compare the effect of opioid-containing anesthesia vs opioid-free anesthesia using the Cortínez-Sepúlveda model on serum levels of IL-6, IL-1β and TNF-α before and after surgery in obese patients undergoing bypass surgery. Methods: A randomized cross-sectional study of 40 unrelated obese adults was performed in the Anesthesiology and Bariatric Surgery Service at the Civil Hospital of Guadalajara "Dr. Juan I. Menchaca". Before undergoing laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, patients were randomly assigned to two anesthesia groups: opiod-containing (n=20) or opioid-free (n=20). The opioid used in the opioid-containing anesthesia group was fentanyl. To characterize the disposition of intravenous propofol for the target-controlled infusion technique in obese patients, the Cortínez-Sepúlveda pharmacokinetic model was used. Body mass was determined to the nearest 0.05kg using a balance scale (Seca 703; Seca, Hamburg, Germany). Blood samples were taken before and immediately after surgery and cytokine serum levels were determined with ELISA kits. Statistical analyses were performed using the IBM Statistical Package for the Social Sciences software package version 20.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA).
NCT00726271
An innovative dietary approach to obesity, based on the set-point theory of body weight and associative learning, was developed by Seth Roberts. Roberts's approach focuses on dissociating flavor and calories by consuming small amounts of very bland but calorie-dense foods such as extra-light olive oil between meals. Roberts believes that the dissociation between flavor and calories lowers the body weight's set point, suppressing appetite and thereby inducing weight loss without causing hunger. Studying the feasibility of this approach is particularly relevant to patients taking drugs that cause increased appetite and weight gain as a side effect, as increased hunger makes the usual calorie restriction approach even more difficult than it normally is. Low-income people have a diet higher in prepackaged standardized foods, which may be one contributing factor to their higher risk of developing obesity. Specific Aims * To test the acceptance of, and the patients' compliance rate to, the Shangri-La Diet * To ascertain whether a controlled clinical trial of the Shangri-La Diet would be feasible. * To see if the weight loss documented anecdotally in many people is reproducible in patients from low-income areas who are overweight and taking prescribed medications associated with increased appetite and weight gain. Analysis: The primary end point will be acceptability of the dietary intervention as measured by the final interview and the evaluation form-is this something patients would be willing to do over the long term? This will help determine whether a controlled trial of the dietary intervention would be feasible, and provide information needed to design such a trial. Secondary outcomes will be changes in the participants' weight, waist measurements, anxiety, and depression scores