View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:Our goal is to provide data that will give surgeons and hospitals clear recommendations on the use of NPWT for Cesarean section, abdominal hysterectomy and colon surgeries in patients with diabetes and/or obesity. We also want to understand the patient experience with the dressing so that we can provide information that will enable clinicians to remove barriers to NPWT use. Additionally, we are seeking to use automated electronic medical record decision support to identify patients that will benefit most from the NPWT.
The study will implement a prospective one-arm feasibility study. After an initial eligibility screening by the primary care provider during their intake appointment, new patients will be invited to participate in an acute intervention to reduce sedentary behaviour during a group appointment at St. Joseph's Primary Care Diabetes Support (SJHC PCDSP). Scheduled with up to 10 other people, participants will be encouraged to model the primary care provider and support team as they engage in minimal sedentary behaviour and replace sitting with standing and light, incidental movements. An accelerometer-based sensory (ActivPAL4) will be worn and used to measure the patients' sedentary behaviour and physical activity patterns, including the duration and frequency of breaks in sedentary time during the appointment. Capillary blood glucose differences will be assessed at pre- and post-appointment. A series of paper-pencil questionnaires will also measure self-efficacy, goal intention, and positive and negative affect at both pre- and post-appointment.
FreeStyle Libre (FSL2) is a novel glucose monitoring device (Flash glucose monitoring) in the form of a disc worn on the arm for 14 days, and a hand-held reader which is designed to largely replace the recommended 4-10 painful finger-stick blood glucose tests required each day for the self-management of type 1 diabetes. The purpose of this study is to determine whether flash glucose monitoring with FSL2 device will improve HbA1c over 24 weeks compared to self-monitoring of blood glucose in adults and adolescents (16 or older) with sub-optimally controlled (HbA1c 7.5% to 11%) type 1 diabetes. This is an open-label, multi-centre, randomised, parallel design study, involving a 2-week run-in period, followed by a 24-week study period during which participants will use either FSL2 or continue usual finger-stick glucose monitoring in random order. A total of up to 156 randomised participants from up to 180 recruited aged 16 years and older with T1D on insulin pump therapy or multiple daily injection therapy were recruited through diabetes clinics in participating centres. Participants will receive appropriate training to maximise the benefits of FSL2 and finger-stick glucose levels in self-management. The primary outcome is the difference in HbA1c between the two groups at 24 weeks. Secondary outcomes are time spent with glucose levels above and below target, as recorded by FSL2, and other flash glucose-based metrics. Impact on quality of life, diabetes distress, mood, needle burden, disordered eating and treatment satisfaction will also be undertaken. Relative cost-effectiveness of FSL2 device compared with self-monitoring will also be assessed from a UK NHS perspective.
Scientific evidence for the dietary treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is insufficient, which is why the investigators aim to reform dietary recommendation to the overweight or obese patient with type 2 diabetes. This clinical study will examine the effect of a highly controlled hypo-energetic carbohydrate-reduced high-protein (CRHP) diet intervention under caloric restriction-induced body weight loss as a treatment modality in T2D. The investigators hypothesize that this intervention compared to the conventional diabetes (CD) diet with similar loss in body weight improves metabolic control and cardiovascular risk profile in T2D by: - Reducing diurnal and postprandial glycaemia, thereby facilitating a significant reduction in HbA1c - Reducing ectopic lipid deposits in liver, muscle and pancreas - Improving lipid profile towards a less atherogenic profile - Improving metabolic actions of insulin, through increased sensitivity and β-cell function - Reducing diurnal blood pressure with no adverse effect on heart rate variability
The investigators propose to deliver a 4-week sleep extension intervention to adolescents to evaluate feasibility of the protocol and obtain preliminary data on intra-individual changes in metabolic parameters induced by sleep extension.
The objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of a novel program-Family Support for Health Action (FAM-ACT) - to individual patient-focused diabetes self-management education and support (I-DSMES).
In this randomized, controlled, assessor blinded and prospective intervention study the investigators will evaluate the clinical feasibility and effectiveness of intermittent use of a fasting mimicking diet in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus compared to usual care.
The purpose of the study is to register the occurrence of cardiovascular disease among type 2 diabetes patients across ten countries across the world. Participants will be asked to give information about their health. Participants will continue their normal way of life and will not get any medication other than prescribed to them by their doctor. Participants' participation will be one day/one visit at their doctor. The study will last for about 6 months in total.
The DIA-LINK Study is a prospective observational study analysing longitudinal associations and mediating links between diabetes distress (DD), depressive symptoms (DS) and glycaemic outcomes in people with type 1 diabetes (T1DM). A total of 200 people with T1DM with different levels of DD and DS are to be enrolled. At baseline, all participants are assessed for DD and DS, psychological and stress-related variables, self-reported self-management, HbA1c and inflammatory markers. This is followed by a 4-week ambulatory assessment period including continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), continuous activity tracking and daily event sampling regarding sleep, stress levels, mood and diabetes-related issues; additionally, cortisol levels are assessed on four days within this period. Three months after baseline, a follow-up assessment covers DD and DS levels, stress-related variables, self-reported self-management, HbA1c and final CGM assessment. The analyses aim to establish risk factors/protective factors regarding DD and DS, their relative impact on glycaemic outcomes and potential mediation of the associations by behavioural (e.g. self-management, physical activity), physical (e.g. heart rate variability, inflammatory activity) and mental variables (subjective stress level) in T1DM.
Our main challenge is to develop a novel physical activity intervention to promote exercise participation sustainability and effective health benefits in type 2 diabetes (T2D) population with minimum health risks. The relevance of this study is supported by four cornerstones: 1) The Portuguese love football and there seems to be a major potential in the implementation of football practice as part of the prevention and treatment of noncommunicable diseases for the middle-aged and elderly Portuguese population; 2) no studies have assessed the feasibility and safety of a walking football exercise program for middle-age and older patients with T2D; 3) the proposed investigation relies on robust methodology; 4) this intervention can have further sustainability with the enrollment of football clubs and primary health care units.