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The present research project aims to evaluate oxidative stress in a cohort of obese adults, subjected to an in-hospital 3-week multidisciplinary body weight reduction program (BWRP) with or without melatonin. Our hypothesis is that melatonin, administered to the obese subject, could be effective in reducing the oxidative stress associated with physical exercise (acute).
Specifically, the main objective will be to investigate a difference in the mean levels of some peripheral oxidative stress markers at their peak during an acute exercise session in the two groups (primary endpoint).
Secondly, the possible pre-post difference (baseline vs end of treatment) of the peak of each oxidative stress marker between the two groups will be evaluated (secondary endpoint
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Materials and methods 20 obese subjects (F/M = 10/10; age range 18-40 years; body mass index, BMI > 30 kg/m2), hospitalized for a period of integrated metabolic rehabilitation (BWRP) at the Division of Metabolic Diseases, Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Piancavallo (VB), Italy.
After verifying the inclusion/exclusion criteria, including the absence of other relevant pathologies apart from obesity, we will proceed with the collection of clinical data (heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature) and anthropometric data (weight, height, BMI, waist circumference, hip circumference), including assessment of body composition with bio-impedancemetry.
According to a randomized scheme, with the only constraint of maintaining a 1/1 ratio for sex, the subjects will undergo one of the following interventions:
The acute exercise session (test 2, described below) will be performed at D1 and D15 (days 1-15 of BWRP).
Each subject will conduct the following exercise protocols:
All tests will be monitored and supervised by dedicated personnel. For each of the two acute exercise sessions (i.e., before starting the BWRP-G1 and after the BWRP-G15 intervention), four blood draws will be taken: in baseline conditions (pre-exercise), immediately at the end of the 'exercise, and 60-120 minutes after the end of exercise (T0', T30', T90' and T150', respectively), to identify the peak of each marker.
In plasma/serum samples taken basally (T0'), at the end of exercise (T30'), 60' post (T90'), and 120' post (T150') after the end of the exercise, a panel of markers will be determined peripheral oxidative stress. In particular:
Approval of the protocol by the Ethics Committee will be required; informed consent will be collected from all participants.
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Alessandro Sartorio, MD; Luca Grappiolo, Dr.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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