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Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

2 clinical studies listed.

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Bariatric Surgery Status Complicating Pregnancy

Tundra lists 2 Bariatric Surgery Status Complicating Pregnancy clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT05084339

Glucose Homeostasis, Metabolomics and Pregnancy Outcomes After Bariatric Surgery

The aim of the GLORIA study is to determine whether an altered glucose metabolism (with more hypoglycaemia and glycaemic variability) and altered metabolomics during pregnancy after bariatric surgery contribute to the increased risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes such as small-for-gestational age infants. In addition, the investigators also aim to evaluate whether continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) can be used to diagnose gestational diabetes (GDM).

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - 45 Years

Updated: 2024-05-09

Bariatric Surgery Status Complicating Pregnancy
RECRUITING

NCT05753124

Effect of Obesity, Diabetes and Bariatric Surgery on Pregnancy Outcomes

The obesity epidemic is growing worldwide and in the UK this is perpetuated with a third of women classified as overweight/obese in 2020. Many of these woman are of childbearing age and go on to have high risk pregnancies which are often complicated by gestational or pre-existing (type 2 diabetes mellitus (GDM, T2DM). Bariatric surgery is the most successful treatment of sustainable weight loss and is associated with a reduction in rates of GDM, pre-eclampsia, delivery of large babies but increased risk of delivery of small babies and preterm delivery. The aims of the study are to investigate the maternal and fetal/neonatal, biophysical and biochemical, intra-uterine environment and postnatal profile of pregnancies: 1. affected by maternal obesity and/or GDM/T2DM compared to pregnancies with normal maternal body mass index (BMI). 2. with previous maternal bariatric surgery compared to pregnancies without previous bariatric surgery but matched for maternal pre-surgery and early pregnancy BMI.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - 50 Years

Updated: 2023-03-03

Obesity
Pregnancy in Diabetic
Pregnancy Complications
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