View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:Patients will continue to use their current insulin pump for this study. Patients will receive insulin lispro and insulin aspart during this study. One medication will be taken for 12 weeks and then the other medication for 12 weeks. Neither the patient nor the study doctor will know which medication is being taken at any time. The order in which the two medications are taken will be determined by chance.
The aim of the present study is to investigate the safety of BI 10773 treatment in patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and high cardiovascular risk.
Diabetes is highly prevalent in the elderly, afflicting about 20% of older adults aged 65-75 years and 40% of adults >80years of age. It is expected that the number of elderly people suffering from diabetes will increase in the future, as general life expectancy is increasing. Nursing home residents with diabetes have higher rates of serious comorbidities and have greater activity of daily living dependencies than other residents without diabetes. In addition, persons with diabetes have higher risk of hypertension, heart disease, stroke depression, cognitive impairment, and cardiovascular mortality than individuals without diabetes. There are a few retrospective studies in elderly patients analyzing quality of diabetes care and glycemic control adjusted for medications and presence of co-morbidities in long-term care facilities; however, no previous randomized controlled trials have demonstrated benefits of glycemic control on clinical outcome, quality of life, and rate of acute metabolic complications (hyperglycemia and hypoglycemic events) in long-term care facilities. In addition, it is not known whether the use of basal insulin is superior to treatment with sliding scale insulin (SSI) in long-term care facility residents with type 2 diabetes. Accordingly, the investigators propose to conduct a prospective randomized control trial comparing the efficacy and safety of the basal (glargine) insulin regimen and sliding scale regular insulin in the management of nursing home patients with T2DM.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether green tea or cocoa extracts are effective in improve endothelial dysfunction in patients with diabetes mellitus and nephropathy and arterial hypertension.
COMPASS is a status and intervention study for the self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) in type 2 diabetic patients with insulin treatment. This multi-centre, open-label prospective study will assess the use and frequency of SMBG and blood glucose control and its influencing factors with the help of Accu-Chek Integra glucometer. Patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus who have received more than 3 months of insulin therapy are eligible to participate in this study. The anticipated duration of the study is 6 months.
The investigators will study people who are obese and will be treated by bariatric surgery. The investigators will test the hypothesis that some of the features of obesity are related to the bacteria in the gastro-intestinal tract.
The purpose of this study is to characterize the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and pharmacodynamics (PD) of PF-04991532 following multiple (14 days) escalating oral doses in patient wtih type 2 diabetes.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics (blood levels of the drug) and pharmacodynamics (effects of the drug on the body) of canagliflozin after oral administration to patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
This open-label study examines the efficacy and safety of albiglutide as compared with liraglutide in subjects with type 2 diabetes.
A study in type 2 diabetic subjects on stable metformin therapy to investigate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of co-administering single and multiple oral doses of GSK1292263