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This study will describe the phenotype (physical and behavioral traits) of overweight and obese people. It will characterize the hormones, metabolism, food preferences, fitness and physical activity levels, sleep patterns and thought processes in people with and without weight problems. Genetic material will be collected for studies of the internal codes that influence body weight.
People over 18 years of age from all weight categories (lean, overweight, obese) who are reasonably healthy may be eligible for this study. Participants undergo the following tests and procedures:
Full description
Although complex metabolic, hormonal, and neural networks operate to control body weight, obesity is in most cases, the result of over-feeding and inactivity. In most obese patients, patterns of fundamental behavior determine the success or failure of weight loss interventions. Behavior is controlled to some degree by conscious decision making and is influenced by signals from the integrated networks involved in body weight regulation. The contributions of behavior, environment, socioeconomic status, physiology and genetics assure that no single therapeutic regimen will be successful in all obese individuals. In order to explore the factors that impede weight loss and result in weight regain, the obese phenotype and its variants must be defined. The purpose of this study is to detail hormonal, metabolic, cognitive and behavioral traits across the spectrum of weight categories utilizing the state-of the-art facilities of the Metabolic Units at the Mark O. Hatfield Clinical Research Center, NIH. Genetic material will be banked for analysis of phenotypic subgroups as they emerge.
Patients over the age of 18 are eligible for this study. While childhood obesity is an important public health issue, the variables of growth and hormonal controls will be delineated in separate studies. Over-weight and obese patients are encouraged to participate in as full an evaluation as feasible. Lean individuals will be recruited to create a normative database for body composition (dual energy x-ray absortiometry, air displacement plethysmography), energy expenditure (resting energy expenditure, 24h respiratory chamber and doubly labeled water) and other techniques used to study traits of importance. The study will be conducted in both the inpatient and outpatient setting and can include evaluation of hormones, diurnal variation, sleep, eating behavior and taste perception, physical fitness, psychological and neurocognitive functioning. Importantly, this protocol is the means by which pilot data are obtained to develop novel approaches and hypotheses for studying obesity and its associated traits.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Obese subjects:
Overweight subjects:
Control subjects (may be matched for age, sex and years of education):
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Additional exclusion for lean control subjects:
The NIH Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office will receive inquiries from interested study subjects. Pre-screening by this office will exclude patients who require more than minimal assistance to complete activities of daily living in order to select subjects who can safely participate in the full phenotyping protocol. All others will be contacted by the protocol team to review exclusion criteria. Eligible patients will be invited to Clinical Research Center for a screening visit.
2,000 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Antoinette C Rabel, C.R.N.P.; Ranganath Muniyappa, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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