Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Identifiers
About
This research study is being conducted to examine the effects of daily inorganic nitrite treatment on the cardiometabolic and hormonal disturbances observed in overweight/obese adults with the metabolic syndrome and high blood pressure. Ultimately, oral nitrite therapy may have a major impact on the prevention and treatment of both diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Full description
Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States and worldwide. Several studies have demonstrated that fruit and vegetable rich diets significantly reduced blood pressure and reduced the risk of ischemic stroke and cardiovascular disease in general, the exact mechanisms remain poorly understood. Preclinical and clinical research over the last decade has revealed the important vasoprotective effects of nitrates and nitrites with regards to reduction in blood pressure, vascular inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. More recent findings suggest that inorganic nitrate and nitrite therapy may be involved in the regulation of glucose-insulin homeostasis.
For this reason, development of an oral formulation of nitrite salt represents a rational avenue of exploration for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases, whereby nitrite would ensure rapid acting effects upon absorption which can be further oxidized to nitrate via the enterosalivary circulation pathway. In this pathway, about 25% of circulating nitrate is concentrated in the saliva and reduced to nitrite by commensal mouth bacteria with nitrate reductase enzymes. The proposal is the first human study to investigate the inorganic nitrite effects (in any form) on insulin sensitivity in a patient population. This is the second human trial using orally delivered nitrite (previously as aqueous solution).
In the initial phase of the study, step up dosing and frequency of oral sodium nitrite to 40 mg three times daily occurred with no serious adverse events. After three subjects completed the study intervention on sodium nitrite 20 mg three times daily for 2 weeks followed by 40 mg three times daily for the remaining 10 weeks with no serious adverse events, all subjects in this current phase of the trial (n=20) began the 12-week study intervention with 40 mg three times daily. At the same time, in person monitoring visits (which included brief physical exams, directly observed nitrite dosing, secondary outcome measure assessment of methemoglobin level and blood pressure, interval histories, medication compliance review, symptom review and dispensing of study drug) were spaced from weekly intervals to subjects alternating weekly in person visits with phone visits.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
20 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal