A few human clinical trials have examined the effects of pulse «extracts» taken as a dietary supplement on body weight and related parameters.
Not exact matches
A
few drugs have shown promise in cell culture or animal models, but
clinical trials in
humans are time consuming because of the slow onset and progression of the disorder's
clinical symptoms.
But sometime within the next
few years, Min and Rhee plan to run
clinical trials in
humans to see whether FlaB - enhanced bacteria could work as a safe, effective anticancer therapy.
However, for these basic research findings to become
human treatment,
clinical trials are needed to discover which drug is most efficient in activating brown fat and has
few or no side effects.
Human infection with the etiologic agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, results in disease of a
few hallmark
clinical signs and multifarious symptoms.
And, indeed, small
clinical trials in
humans have shown patients report less fatigue and
fewer gastrointestinal symptoms while fasting during chemotherapy treatments.
Treating mice with anti-STAT5 drugs for a
few weeks after they finished nursing their young lessened the elevated cancer risk, and so the next challenge is to see if this approach will also be effective in
human clinical trials.
No
fewer than 28
clinical trials in
humans have shown that pantethine produces significant positive changes in triglycerides, LDL cholesterol, and VLDL, along with increases in HDL cholesterol.5 In all of these trials, virtually no adverse effects were noted.
A
clinical human trial recently published in The New England Journal of Medicine in August of 2017 may tip a
few more in the medical field into accepting the current awareness that inflammatory damage is a major cause of heart and cardiovascular disease, and cholesterol is trying to patch up the damage before the vessel begins to leak or rupture.
See: • Therapeutic roles of curcumin: lessons learned from
clinical trials (2013) Many, many spices, fruits and vegetables have anti-inflammatory properties in the laboratory, though
fewer have seen
human trials.
Whereas enthusiasm for fasting is increasing,
clinical relevance remains low because of insufficient
human data, including almost nonexistent controlled trials (21, 33 — 36),
few clinical outcomes studies (37, 38), lack of correction for inflated type I error rates from multiple hypothesis tests, and limited safety data (39 — 41).
Whereas the
few randomized controlled trials and observational
clinical outcomes studies support the existence of a health benefit from fasting, substantial further research in
humans is needed before the use of fasting as a health intervention can be recommended.
Few clinical trials have been conducted in
humans, although several long - term studies are now under way.
Over the past
few decades, evidence has been mounting that turmeric is one of the most valuable herbs in the
human diet, with
clinical data indicating the potential for a wide range of benefits.
I am a
clinical psychologist and of course
human being with a vested interest in getting better at relationships and understanding what makes them work, and there are
few writers or models out there I would recommend more highly.