Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT02789553
Starches Digestion After Obesity Surgery.
Starches Digestion After Obesity Surgery. A Comparative Study.
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 13 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University Hospital, Toulouse · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 60 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Despite an impressive capacity to induce diabetes remissions, the gastric bypass surgery has been associated with the onset of hyperglycemic peaks, which are very intensive and transient, in formally non diabetic patients. The aim of this study is to study the digestion of starch as compared to that of glucose (same glucose load) before and after gastric bypass surgery in obese patients. Volunteers will be recruited among the candidates to a gastric bypass, and will be studied before and 3 months after surgery. They will have on each occasion 2 random meals, corresponding to 30g glucose, one made of starch the other made of glucose, both naturally labeled with 13C. The digestion of starch will be assessed with the increase in the plasma 13C-glucose tracer. Plasma samples will be collected for 3 hours. Some studies have already investigated time of absorption of glucose, but any study has examined the time of digestion of glucose. Other study always used glucose syrup, so they cannot have results about digestion. It is the reason why, in this study, glucose syrup and a starch meal will be taken by the same patient and glycaemia will be compared. In this way, results will be obtained about the kinetic of digestion of starch.
Detailed description
Despite an impressive capacity to induce diabetes remissions, the gastric bypass surgery has been associated with the onset of hyperglycemic peaks, which are very intensive and transient, in formally non diabetic patients. The aim of this study is to study the digestion of starch as compared to that of glucose (same glucose load) before and after gastric bypass surgery in obese patients. Volunteers will be recruited among the candidates to a gastric bypass, and will be studied before and 3 months after surgery. They will have on each occasion 2 random meals, corresponding to 30g glucose, one made of starch the other made of glucose, both naturally labeled with 13C. The digestion of starch will be assessed with the increase in the plasma 13C-glucose tracer. Plasma samples will be collected for 3 hours. Some studies have already investigated time of absorption of glucose, but any study has examined the time of digestion of glucose. Other study always used glucose syrup, so they cannot have results about digestion. It is the reason why, in this study, glucose syrup and a starch meal will be taken by the same patient and glycaemia will be compared. In this way, results will be obtained about the kinetic of digestion of starch. All patients will have two evaluations: one before the bypass surgery and one 3 months after. All evaluation will include 2 standard meals. Patients have to be fasted, and they will take in a randomized order the same glucose quantity: 30g, for the breakfast. After each meal, blood sample will be collected during 3 hours at time 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 minutes and every 30 minutes until time 180. The starch meal will provide 30g of glucose in the form of corn starch. It will be consumed in 15 minutes. They are any other food in the meal. This quantity is corresponding to what patients can ingest after a bypass surgery, because of the poor size of their stomach. C13-carbon is a natural tracer into the corn. The measure of the increase of C13-glucose in the plasma is showing the appearance of the tracer, corresponding to the starch digestion. The second meal is composed by 30g of corn glucose (glucose-meal), in liquid form and will be dived in 3 portions to be ingested in 15 minutes, like the starch meal. They are any other food in the meal.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | First starch meal then meal with glucose syrup | Before bypass surgery, patients will take randomized meal. One day a starch meal and another day a glucose syrup meal. 3 months after surgery, they will take these 2 randomized meal again, one day the first one, and the day after the other one. |
| OTHER | First meal with glucose syrup then starch meal | Before bypass surgery, patients will take randomized meal. One day a meal with glucose syrup and another day a starch meal. 3 months after surgery, they will take these 2 randomized meal again, one day the first one, and the day after the other one. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2018-02-19
- Primary completion
- 2019-07-02
- Completion
- 2019-07-02
- First posted
- 2016-06-03
- Last updated
- 2021-11-04
Locations
1 site across 1 country: France
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02789553. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.