View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:A 3-week, multi-center, open-label, randomized, active-control, parallel-group study to compare effects of Nateglinide and Acarbose on postprandial glucose fluctuation in Chinese drug-naive patients type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In this study, participants in different groups took Nateglinide at a dose of 120 mg orally three times daily for up to 3 weeks or Acarbose at a dose of 50 mg three times daily for up to 3 weeks, respectively.
This trial was conducted in Europe. The aim of this clinical trial was to look into the concentration of NN1250 (insulin degludec/insulin 454) in the blood after one injection of NN1250 in children, adolescents and adults with type 1 diabetes.
This project is a pilot study of caffeine abstinence in coffee-drinkers who have type 2 diabetes. Evidence suggests that caffeine may impair the control of glucose levels, especially in those people who have type 2 diabetes. Eliminating caffeinated beverages from the diet might improve glucose control, but the difficulty of quitting is unknown. This pilot study will follow a small number of type 2 diabetic patients for three months after a brief intervention designed to help people quit caffeine. Data on success with maintaining abstinence and on changes in glucose control will be collected.
This study will enrol patients with diabetes who have already elected to undergo pars plana vitrectomy (eye surgery) to remove persistent vitreous haemorrhage (a complication of severe diabetic eye disease in which blood fills the inner cavity of the eye, obscuring the vision and preventing treatment to stop the bleeding). Those in the treatment arm will have an intravitreal injection of ranibizumab (Lucentis) at the same dose used for the treatment of neovascular (wet) age-related macular degeneration (a disease that has some features in common with diabetic eye disease). It is hypothesised that this will promote clearance of the vitreous haemorrhage and that this, in turn, may mean that some patients do not need to proceed to vitrectomy.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of three doses of CKD-501 compared to placebo in lowering fasting plasma glucose levels in people with type 2 diabetes for 8 weeks.
Macular Edema (Swelling of a particular site of the retina) can become a significant problem for Diabetics undergoing Cataract surgery. And a significant number of people who undergo Cataract surgery each year are diabetics. And when you multiply these two factors together you are left with a significant number of people who do not gain as much vision as their peers. Diabetics who develop Macular Edema actually can loose some vision after surgery and when you follow them up, they don't gain as much vision. This Study aims to prevent such an event from happening and therefore allow Diabetics to gain as much vision as they can from cataract surgery. This study will use Dexamethasone injected intravitreally (into the gel of the eye) at the end of cataract extraction to control Macular edema brought about by surgery. The main outcome is the central retina thickness and retinal volume as measured by Optical Coherence Tomography. Secondary outcomes are BCVA and incidence of Laser Treatment. Other Drugs, life Bevacizumab and Pegaptanib, have been used for this purpose but they are expensive and have potential systemic side-effects due to anti-VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) actions. Dexamethasone has been used in the eye for decades and is short-lived, minimizing possible systemic effects. Moreover, this drug is at least 15x cheaper than the previously mentioned ones and therefore has tremendous benefit for developing countries. We seek an alternative drug that can reduce or prevent Macular edema at a less expensive and safer way.
The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of EGT0001442 on fasting plasma glucose after 28 days of treatment in subjects with type 2 diabetes. The study also assessed the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of EGT0001442, the effect on weight and HbA1c as well as the effect EGT0001442 has on the amount of glucose produced in the body by the urine.
Previous animal studies have shown that extracts of Curcumin lowers blood glucose.
The proposed trial seeks to determine the impact of patient decision aids versus usual care on measures of patient involvement in decision-making, diabetes care processes, medication adherence, glycemic and cardiovascular risk factor control, and resource utilization in nonurban practices in the Midwestern United States. Upon completion of this trial, the investigators will have new knowledge about both the effectiveness of diabetes decision aids in nonacademic nonurban practices and about the processes that promote or inhibit the successful implementation of patient decision aids in such practices.
This trial is conducted in Europe. The aim of this trial is to investigate the safety, tolerance, pharmacokinetics (exposure of drug) and pharmacodynamics (effect) of NN1952 as tablets in healthy volunteers and subjects with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The trial consists of two parts. In part 1, single escalating doses of NN1952, placebo or insulin aspart will be given to healthy volunteers. In part 2, subjects with type 1 or type 2 diabetes will receive single doses of NN1952 (with/without a meal), insulin aspart and placebo.