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Clinical Trial Summary

Oral zinc supplementation in patients with diabetes mellitus can improve glycemic control. However, there is reluctance to recommend zinc supplements to these patients because there is no evidence that the zinc-dependent improvement in glycemic control offers protections from the cardiovascular morbidities associated with diabetes mellitus, especially myocardial infarction and thrombotic stroke. The investigators are conducting a randomized, double blind, cross over study to test the hypothesis that oral zinc supplementation will block the enhanced cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and platelet reactivity that lead to myocardial infarction and stroke in research participants with diabetes mellitus.


Clinical Trial Description

Diabetes mellitus induces adverse changes in the systemic blood vessels, the cerebral vasculature, and platelets that can culminate in myocardial infarction and thrombotic stroke. Also, when compared to patients whose diabetes mellitus is well controlled, poor glucose maintenance in men and women with diabetes mellitus undeniably confers a much greater risk of myocardial infarction and stroke. For these reasons, it is important to maintain euglycemia in patients with diabetes mellitus. Several studies have shown supplemention with oral zinc improves glycemic control in patients with diabetes mellitus. Zinc supplementation has been associated with an absolute fall in glycosylated hemoglobin (HgbA1c), a measurement of metabolic control, by 0.5 percentage points. It is unknown whether this dietary supplement improves the exaggerated systemic and cerebrovascular and platelet responsiveness that are responsible for the increased prevalence of myocardial infarction and stroke in patients with diabetes mellitus. The investigators postulate that zinc dietary supplementation, when compared to placebo, will significantly reduce the increased cardiovascular reactivity and thrombogenesis associated with myocardial infarction or stroke in men and women with diabetes mellitus. The investigators will conduct a randomized, double-blinded, cross over study in volunteers with diabetes mellitus in which the participants receive either four months of placebo or oral zinc gluconate (30 mg zinc gluconate). Subjects will have validated, non-invasive, non-pharmacologic assessments of both their systemic and cerebrovascular reactivity and platelet responsiveness. The investigators anticipate that zinc supplementation will enhance flow mediated endothelium-dependent vasodilation in the peripheral vasculature in patients with diabetes mellitus, and also, reduces cardiovascular responses to stress. It is expected that zinc supplementation will blunt the magnitude of blood pressure increases induced by exercise in the research subjects. Also, the investigators expect to show that zinc supplementation, when compared to placebo, reduces pulse wave velocity, a measure of vascular stiffness, in the research subjects with diabetes mellitus. The investigators will show that zinc supplementation, when compared to placebo, improves cerebral blood flow in patients with diabetes mellitus. The investigators will assess cerebrovascular reactivity by measuring the sensitivity of intracerebral blood vessels to increasing concentrations of pCO2, a maneuver which selectively relaxes the cerebral vasculature and increases cerebral blood flow. Finally, the investigators anticipate that zinc supplementation will reduce platelet aggregation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05000762
Study type Observational
Source Wayne State University
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase
Start date June 1, 2021
Completion date December 31, 2025

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