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临床试验 NCT06791837 针对糖尿病,肥胖症目前招募中。请查看临床试验雷达卡片视图和 AI 发现工具了解所有详情,或在此提出任何问题。
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Brain Blood Flow and Lactate in Non-obese and Obese Subjects

招募中
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临床试验NCT06791837是一项针对糖尿病,肥胖症观察研究试验,目前试验状态为招募中。试验始于2025年5月1日,计划招募24名患者。该研究由密苏里大学哥伦比亚分校主导,预计于2027年3月1日完成。试验数据来源于ClinicalTrials.gov,最后更新时间为2025年11月26日
简要概括
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is essential for maintaining brain health and function, as it ensures delivery oxygen and nutrients necessary to support neuronal activity. Reduced CBF can impair the brain's ability to meet its metabolic demands, leading to deficits in cognitive ability. Impairments in CBF are associated with cognitive decline and neurodegenerative disease such as Alzheimer's and dementia. Many factors influence CBF, but recently lactate has emerged as a key player. Blood glucose has long been considered the primary fuel for the brain, but emerging evidence indicates that lactate may be the preferred fuel for neurons, and lactate may become even more important under stressful conditions.

Individuals with obesity often have impaired lactate metabolism resulting in higher resting blood lactate concentrations and reduced ability to clear lactate after a physiological stress. At the same time, it is known that exercise is a powerful intervention for improving lactate metabolism.

Thus, this project seeks to investigate the role of lactate in brain blood flow in individuals with and without obesity as well as establish if short term exercise training (individuals with obesity only) will alter circulating lactate concentrations at rest and in response to exercise.

详细描述
Blood lactate is often considered a waste product from aerobic metabolism. Many people assume it causes fatigue and muscle. Lactate is a signaling molecule in the body. In addition lactate is also a fuel. Evidence supports that lactate may be more important when the brain is stressed. We also know that individuals with obesity and/or type 2 diabetes may have impaired lactate metabolism.

The investigators will compare brain blood flow and lactate response to an exercise stress test and submaximal exercise in obese and non-obese individuals.

官方标题

Cerebral Lactate Uptake and Transport in Obese and Non-Obese Individuals

疾病
糖尿病肥胖症
出版物
关于此临床试验发表的科学文章和研究论文:
其他研究标识符
  • 2125746
NCT编号
实际开始日期
2025-05-01
最近更新发布
2025-11-26
预计完成日期
2027-03-01
计划入组人数
24
研究类型
观察研究
试验状态
招募中
关键词
lactate
obesity
exercise
试验组/干预措施
参与者组/试验组干预措施/治疗方法
non-obese
individuals with a BMI\<25 kg/m2
锻炼
each group will undergo a max test and a submaximal exercise test
obese
individuals with a BMI 30-40 kg/m2
锻炼
each group will undergo a max test and a submaximal exercise test
主要终点
结果指标度量标准描述时间框架
brain blood flow
Using transcranial doppler we will measure brain blood flow
over the 30 minutes of testing
次要终点
结果指标度量标准描述时间框架
lactate concentrations
Lactate will be measured in response to an exercise stress test as well as to a submaximal exercise bout
over ~ 60 minutes of testing
资格标准

适龄参与研究
成人
最低年龄要求
18 Years
适龄性别
全部
接受健康志愿者

healthy adult men and women 18-45 years of age BMI 18-40 kg/m2 not pregnant, premenopausal with regular menstrual cycles not breastfeeding non-nicotine users

medications known to affect sleep, autonomic control, blood lactate levels or metabolic, or cardiovascular function (PI discretion) self-reported history of hepatic, renal, pulmonary, cardiovascular, or neurological disease, stroke or neurovascular disease, bleeding/clotting disorders, sleep apnea or other sleep disorders, diabetes, history of alcoholism or substance abuse major cardiovascular event or surgical procedure within the past three months hypertension (>140/90 mmHg or at PIs discretion).

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University of Missouri-Columbia logo密苏里大学哥伦比亚分校95 个活跃的临床试验可供探索
研究责任方
Jill Kanaley, 主要研究者, professor, University of Missouri-Columbia
研究中心联系人
联系人: Matt McDonald, MS, 6185815501, [email protected]
联系人: Jill Kanaley, PhD, 5738822519, [email protected]
1 位于 1 个国家/地区的研究中心

Missouri

University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, 65211, United States
Matt McDonald, MS, 联系人, 618-581-5501, [email protected]
Jill Kanaley, PhD, 联系人, 5738822519, [email protected]
Jill Kanaley, PhD, 主要研究者
招募中