5 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
This open label study seeks to study the effects of a nutritional supplement on inflammatory markers, metabolic parameters, and safety in subjects compared to baseline after taking supplement for 2 and 4 months.
The objective of this study is the development, implementation and management of a registry of patient data that captures clinically meaningful, real-world, data on the diagnosis, nature, course of infection, treatment(s) and outcomes in patients with complex disease globally.
The purpose of this research was to understand the effects of bioactive compounds found in wheat cereal on human immunity. Subjects came in for a baseline blood draw, consumed whole wheat bran cereal daily for 21 days, and returned for a final blood draw. Immune function assays were performed at both sampling times. It was predicted that eating wheat bran would benefit immune function.
The overall objective of the study is to examine the changes within the gut microbiome after the supplementation of inulin and its effect on markers of mineral metabolism and bone turnover.
Animal studies have found that vitamin K-dependent proteins matrix Gla protein and osteocalcin beneficially influence lipid and glucose metabolism, respectively. However, this concept has not been tested in humans at risk for dyslipidemia and diabetes risk. Vitamin K supplementation presents an opportunity to test the hypothesized link between the vitamin K-dependent proteins and markers of lipid and glucose metabolism. The investigators will conduct an 8-week vitamin K intervention (to manipulate carboxylation of matrix Gla protein and osteocalcin) and determine its effects on markers of dyslipidemia and diabetes risk. Sixty obese children will be randomly allocated to either the control group receiving placebo or the low-dose (45 mcg/d) or high-dose group (90 mcg/d) receiving vitamin K (menaquinone-7).