Atherosclerosis Cardiovascular Disease research hub
6 indexed studies · 4 currently recruiting
- not yet recruitingNA
Comparative Effects of Carnivore and Mediterranean-style Diets on LDL Aggregation and Cardiometabolic Health
This study looks at how a Mediterranean or Carnivore diet affects heart health in people aged 30-60 with high cholesterol. Researchers will compare how these diets impact cholesterol and other heart markers over three weeks.
United Kingdom - active not recruitingPHASE3
Semaglutide 2.4 mg in Patients With Poor Weight-loss
This study is looking at whether a medicine called semaglutide, given as a 3mg injection, can help people who haven't lost enough weight after weight-loss surgery. It compares semaglutide to a dummy treatment over 68 weeks to see if it helps with weight loss and overall health.
United Kingdom - not yet recruiting
Associations Between Dietary Patterns, LDL Aggregation, and Cardiometabolic Health: A Cross-sectional Analysis.
This study looks at how different diets (vegan, omnivore, carnivore) affect heart health. Researchers will see if certain diets make bad cholesterol clump together, which might lead to blocked arteries. It's for healthy adults following these diets.
United Kingdom - not yet recruitingNA
Validation of the Snouda Metabolic Score for Phenotyping and Guiding Reversal in Type 2 Diabetes
United Kingdom - active not recruitingNA
Evaluation of Lifestyle Modification on Cardiovascular Risk
This study looks at how exercise, and a healthy Mediterranean diet, might help women aged 45-65 who are overweight or obese and have gone through menopause. It aims to improve heart health and metabolic health (like blood sugar and cholesterol) over 8 weeks.
United Kingdom - recruitingNA
Multi-organ Responses to CHronic Physical Activity and INactivity
This study looks at how physical activity and inactivity affect our bodies as we get older. We're trying to understand why staying active is so important for keeping healthy and preventing age-related problems, so we can help people live healthier for longer.
United Kingdom