Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Diabetic neuropathy is a progressive complication causing serious problems in 25-40% of diabetic patients. Anecdotal reports have indicated improvement with pulsatile IV insulin therapy in affected patients otherwise resistant to all conventional therapies. Significant complications produce painful peripheral dysesthesias, loss of sensation and gastroparesis. This study is designed to test the effectiveness of pulsatile IV insulin therapy on diabetic neuropathy.


Clinical Trial Description

Diabetic neuropathy (DN) is a progressive complication causing serious problems in 25%-40% of diabetic patients. Significant complications produce painful peripheral dysesthesias, loss of sensation, and gastroparesis. DN may affect the peripheral motor and sensory nerves in addition to the autonomic nervous system (1-3). Treatment strategies for patients with DN have generally concentrated on pain relief, without addressing the underlying pathophysiology of the disease (4). Anecdotal reports from patients treated with pulsatile IV insulin therapy for other complications suggest that this treatment may show efficacy in patients with DN. This study is designed to compare patients with DN who receive pulsatile IV insulin therapy with a control group.

Pulsatile IV insulin therapy encourages the glucose metabolism in diabetics to normalize in multiple organs, especially muscle, retina, liver, kidney and nerve endings. The process fundamentally requires the administration of high dose insulin pulses similar to those secreted by non diabetic humans by their pancreas into the surrounding portal circulation. Oral carbohydrates are given simultaneously to augment the process and prevent hypoglycemia. The process is monitored by frequent measuring of glucose levels and respiratory quotients (RQ). RQ is measured by a metabolic cart which determines the ratio VCO2/VO2. This ratio is specific for the fuel used at any one time by the body. The glucose levels are monitored to keep glucose levels appropriate and the RQ determines the need to readjust the infusion protocol in each patient for subsequent insulin infusion sessions. Pulsatile IV insulin therapy is done over 1-hour periods with a 1-hour rest period between each treatment. Three treatments are given during a patient visit to the center.

Frequent monitoring of RQ is necessary as these levels change rapidly, depending on the fuel being utilized by the body. IV insulin given in pulses shifts metabolism from primarily fatty acid metabolism to primarily glucose metabolism. This shift is reflected by the increase in respiratory quotient. However during rest periods the RQ may fall back to lower levels. Therefore RQs are done at the beginning and at the end of each insulin infusion session in order to appropriately monitor and adjust insulin and carbohydrate loads to reach optimal activation in each session.

The respiratory quotient (RQ) is a measurement of CO2 exhaled and O2 inhaled and is proportionate to the fuel sources being used by the body, primarily the liver over short periods of time. The higher the RQ, the more glucose and less alternative fuel sources are being utilized. Following the RQ change helps determine the effectiveness of physiological insulin administration in increasing anabolic functions in diabetic individuals. By improving the body's glucose metabolism and thereby causing beneficial effects of anabolic factors, the possibility of serious complications can be decreased. In addition the use of oral carbohydrates at the same time along with the physiologic insulin administration stimulates the appropriate gut hormones which augment this effect, a response which cannot be duplicated with intravenous glucose. The purpose of our studies is to determine whether the physiologic administration of insulin along with the augmenting effect of oral carbohydrates will normalize metabolism in diabetic patients and correlate with an improvement in their manifestations of diabetic neuropathy.

The RQ is determined by the use of a metabolic cart. Individuals breathe into a mask for 3-5 minutes after a rest period of 30 or more minutes. The ratio of exhaled volume of CO2 to the inhaled volume of O2 is determined as the RQ. The physiologic range is 0.7 to 1.3. Individuals using fat as a primary fuel have a ratio of 0.7, protein or mixed fuels is 0.8-0.9 and carbohydrate is 0.9-1.0. Those taking excessive calories will have RQs higher than 1.05. The amount of intravenous insulin and oral glucose given is determined by the RQ changes during the previous session.

1. Tesfaye S, Chaturvedi N, Eaton SEM, Ward JD, Manes C, Ionescu-Tirgoviste C, witte DR, Fuller JH, Vascular Risk factors and Diabetic Neuropathy N Engl J Med 352:341-50, 2005.

2. Neuropathy Trust, Diabetic Neuropathy: Prevalence, www.neurocentre.com.

3. Potter PJ, Maryniak O, Yamorski R, Jones IC, Incidence of Peripheral Neuropathy in the Contralateral Limb of Persons with Unilateral Amputation due to Diabetes, Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development 35:335-39, 1998.

4. Goldstein DJ, Lu Y, Detke MJ, Lee TC, Iyengan, Duloxetine versus Placebo in Patients with Painful Diabetic Neuropathy, Pain 116:109-18, 2005. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00228904
Study type Interventional
Source Florida Atlantic University
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 2/Phase 3
Start date February 2005
Completion date October 2011

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04025320 - The Effect of Intraneural Facilitation Therapy on Diabetic Patients With Peripheral Neuropathy N/A
Completed NCT02659007 - Less Neuropathy After Yoga- Managing Diabetic Neuropathy With Yoga Phase 1
Completed NCT01953757 - A Nutritional Intervention for Diabetic Neuropathy (WCCR-DN2) N/A
Completed NCT01707979 - NIR- and Multifrequent Impedance Spectroscopy on the Skin in Type 1 Diabetes N/A
Completed NCT00608439 - Centella Asiatica Selected Triterpenes (CAST) for Diabetic Neuropathy Phase 2
Completed NCT00576277 - Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Preliminary Efficacy of AV411 in Neuropathic Pain Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00830011 - Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Painful Diabetic Neuropathy N/A
Completed NCT00235443 - A Follow-On Trial to Assess the Long Term Safety and Efficacy of SPM 927 in Painful Distal Diabetic Neuropathy Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00931879 - Lovaza® and Microvascular Function in Type 2 Diabetes Phase 4
Completed NCT00190970 - The Effect of Ruboxistaurin on Small Fiber Function Phase 2
Completed NCT00101426 - Safety and Efficacy of AS-3201 in the Treatment of Diabetic Sensorimotor Polyneuropathy Phase 3
Completed NCT00238550 - Study of CBME in the Relief of Painful Diabetic Neuropathy Phase 2
Completed NCT05573685 - Basket Study (CT-100-002) to Evaluate the Effects of a DiNaMoâ„¢ Component Training N/A
Recruiting NCT02341261 - Activity for Diabetic Polyneuropathy N/A
Completed NCT01822925 - Study of DA-9801 to Treat Diabetic Neuropathy Phase 2
Completed NCT01690962 - A Nutritional Intervention for Diabetic Neuropathy N/A
Terminated NCT00993018 - A Study of Effectiveness and Safety of JNJ-42160443 in Patients With Diabetic Painful Neuropathy Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT02315235 - The Peripheral Mobilized Mononuclear Cell-based Therapy in Patient With Diabetic Neuropathy N/A
Completed NCT00496457 - Efficacy Study With 500 mg QD of TRO19622 vs Placebo in Patients With Painful Peripheral Diabetic Neuropathy Phase 2
Recruiting NCT02606747 - The Balance Control Mechanism of DPN Patients N/A