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2 clinical studies listed.
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Tundra lists 2 Healthy Obesity, Metabolically clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT06799897
Natural Course of Initially Metabolic Healthy Obese Individuals (Healthy Obesity)?
The main goal of this study is to gain a thorough understanding, which specific factors drive the unhealthy sequelae of obesity. Therefore, the investigators want to understand: 1. What distinguishes obese persons without metabolic diseases from those with medical diseases in a cross-sectional comparison? 2. Which factors drive the conversions from metabolically healthy obesity into a metabolically unhealthy obesity in a longitudinal approach?
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 60 Years
Updated: 2025-05-30
NCT05191160
The Soy Treatment Evaluation for Metabolic Health (STEM) Trial
Strategies to reduce sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB) have become one of the leading public health targets to address the epidemics of obesity and diabetes. National food, nutrition, and health policies and programs have positioned low-fat milk as the preferred caloric replacement strategy for SSBs. This strategy derives from evidence that replacement of SSBs with low-fat milk is associated with reductions in weight and incident diabetes in prospective cohort studies and reduces liver fat (an important early metabolic lesion linking obesity to diabetes), as well as triglycerides and blood pressure in randomized trials. Whether these benefits hold for soy milk alternatives is unclear. There is an urgent need for studies to clarify the benefits of soy milk as an alternative to cow's milk. Our overarching aim is to produce high-quality clinical evidence that informs the use of soy as a "public health intervention" for addressing the dual epidemics of obesity and diabetes and overall metabolic health. To achieve this aim, we propose to conduct the Soy Treatment Evaluation for Metabolic health (STEM) trial, a large, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial to assess the effect of using 2% soy milk (soy protein vehicle) versus 2% cow's milk (casein and whey vehicle matched for protein and volume) as a "public health intervention" to replace SSBs on liver fat and key cardiometabolic mediators/indicators in an at risk population.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years
Updated: 2024-04-18
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