deltatrials
Completed PHASE1/PHASE2 INTERVENTIONAL 2-arm NCT00741312

Influence of Physical Exercise on Endothelial Function in Pregnant Women

Influence of Physical Exercise on Endothelial Function in Pregnant Women: Randomized Clinical Trial

Sponsor: Fundación Cardiovascular de Colombia

Updated 7 times since 2017 Last updated: Jan 20, 2011 Started: Oct 31, 2008 Primary completion: Oct 31, 2010 Completion: Jan 31, 2011

This PHASE1/PHASE2 trial investigates Exercise and Preeclampsia and is currently completed. Fundación Cardiovascular de Colombia leads this study, which shows 7 recorded versions since 2008 — indicating limited longitudinal coverage. The change history captured here reflects the iterative nature of clinical trial conduct.

Study Description(click to expand)

Preeclampsia is a common maternal disease that complicates 5% to 10% of pregnancies and remains as the major cause of maternal and neonatal mortality, especially in developing countries. Cost-effective interventions aimed to prevent the development of preeclampsia are urgently needed. Ethiopathogenesis of preeclampsia involves multiple mechanisms as oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, infections, maternal constitutional factors, and others. Regular aerobic exercise recovers endothelial function, decreases oxidative stress and improves maternal constitutional factors. The purpose of this Controlled Clinical Trial is to determine the effect of regular aerobic exercise on endothelium-dependent brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation. Furthermore, the effect of exercise on biomarkers on vascular function and perinatal outcomes will be evaluated.

Preeclampsia is a common maternal disease that complicates 5% to 10% of pregnancies and remains as the major cause of maternal and neonatal mortality, especially in developing countries. Cost-effective interventions aimed to prevent the development of preeclampsia are urgently needed. Ethiopathogenesis of preeclampsia involves multiple mechanisms as oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, infections, maternal constitutional factors, and others. Regular aerobic exercise recovers endothelial function, decreases oxidative stress and improves maternal constitutional factors.

The purpose of this Controlled Clinical Trial is to determine the effect of regular aerobic exercise on endothelium-dependent brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation. Furthermore, the effect of exercise on biomarkers on vascular function and perinatal outcomes will be evaluated.

Status Flow

~Jan 2017 – ~Jun 2018 · 17 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jun 2018 – ~Jan 2021 · 31 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jan 2021 – ~Jul 2024 · 42 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jul 2024 – ~Sep 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Sep 2024 – ~Sep 2025 · 12 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Sep 2025 – ~Nov 2025 · 2 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Nov 2025 – present · 5 months · monthly snapshotCompleted

Change History

7 versions recorded
  1. Nov 2025 — Present [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1/PHASE2

  2. Sep 2025 — Nov 2025 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1/PHASE2

  3. Sep 2024 — Sep 2025 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1/PHASE2

  4. Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1/PHASE2

    Phase: PHASE1_PHASE2PHASE1/PHASE2

  5. Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1_PHASE2

Show 2 earlier versions
  1. Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1_PHASE2

  2. Jan 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE1_PHASE2

    First recorded

Oct 2008

Trial started

Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot

Eligibility Summary

No eligibility information available.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • Fundación Cardiovascular de Colombia
  • Universidad del Valle, Colombia
Data source: Universidad del Valle, Colombia

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .

Study Locations