View clinical trials related to Dysglycemia.
Filter by:Evaluation of the reciprocal relation between hyperglycemia/diabetes mellitus (HG/DM) and COVID-19 disease and the effect of mode of insulin therapy; intensive (IIT) or conventional (CIT) on patients' outcomes All patients admitted to the quarantine hospitals with mild-severe COVID disease were evaluated using the COVID-GRAM Critical Illness Risk Score and gave blood samples for estimation of random blood glucose. Diabetic patients and non-diabetic patients with persistent HG were randomly divided according to mode of IT. Patients who were free HG were included as control normoglycemic (NG) patients. Study outcomes included the incidence of progress to critical illness and mortality rate (MR), and the effect of IT on such outcomes
This clinical study aims to investigate the effects of TOTUM-63, a mix of 5 plant extracts, consumed at the daily regimen of three times per day, on cardiometabolic health and gut microbiota profile in overweight-obese individuals.
This cohort study will measure how severe is the coronary artery disease (CAD), at time of CAD diagnosis, clinically and angiographically in the different cohorts of newly diagnosed diabetes and prediabetes versus normal glycemia patients in the study center.
People with serious mental illness (SMI) such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and bipolar affective disorder have a significantly reduced life expectancy, caused in part by increased incidences of mortality from physical health conditions such as cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes. Electronic clinical decision support systems (eCDSS) offer clinicians patient-specific advice and recommendations based on clinical guidelines, theoretically overcoming obstacles in the use of existing paper-based guidelines. Adoption of eCDSS to address CVD risk in people with SMI presents a unique opportunity for research, but requires evidence of acceptability and feasibility before scaling up of research. The key objective of this study is to establish the feasibility and acceptability of an eCDSS (CogStack @ Maudsley) compromising a real-time electronic health record powered alerting and clinical decision support system for diabetes management in secondary inpatient mental healthcare settings. End-users of the eCDSS will be clinicians only. Firstly we will conduct initial surveys and interviews with clinicians on inpatient wards to scope experiences of managing diabetes in secondary mental healthcare settings and attitudes towards use of digital technologies to aid in clinical decision making. A feasibility study will then be run to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of implementing eCDSS on inpatient wards. This will involve a cluster RCT on inpatient general adult psychiatry wards, where 4 months of eCDSS use by clinicians on intervention wards will be compared to 4 months of treatment as usual on control wards. All clinicians on recruited wards will be eligible to participate. At the end of the study, participating clinicians on intervention wards will be invited to take part in a survey and interview which will explore their experiences and attitudes towards using the eCDSS, and an implementation science framework will be applied to inform future implementation of eCDSS. Group level pseudonymised outcome data will be gathered through a separate study.
The aim of this international, randomized, parallel arms, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial is to investigate the safety and efficacy of a combination of the two Lactobacillus strains (NZ-GHMH-01) on glucose and insulin metabolism, in prediabetic subjects. This trial will include prediabetic (insulin resistant) subjects with excessive body weight (over-weight or obese, showing abdominal or visceral obesity) to be able to investigate the effect of the probiotic NZ-GHMH-01 on glycaemic control.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is one of the leading causes of death in the Western Society. Patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) or dysglycemia have an increased risk of developing CVD. Furthermore, T2DM have an increased risk of developing heart failure, especially non-systolic, whether or not this is correlated to stepwise abnormal glycemic status is not fully investigated. The aims of this study are to investigate association between 1) Coronary plaque burden and morphology to glycemic status (normal glucose tolerance (NGT), dysglycemia (impaired fasting glucose (IFG) or impaired glucose tolerance (IGT)) and diabetic oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in participants without known T2DM), 2) Coronary plaque burden and morphology to diastolic and systolic function of the left ventricle including 2D speckle-tracking assessments, 3) Glycemic status to diastolic and systolic function of the left ventricle including 2D speckle-tracking assessments In this descriptive study, 500-800 asymptomatic men aged 65-75 without known diabetes will be included and divided into three subpopulations according to glycemic status. Blood sample, oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), echocardiography and Coronary CT Angiography (CCTA) will be performed at inclusion
This clinical study aims to assess the efficacy of TOTUM-63, a mix of 5 plant extracts, consumed at the daily regimen of three times per day on glucose and lipid homeostasis in dysglycemic subjects. The hypothesis is that TOTUM-63, consumed 3 times per day, is superior to placebo for decrease of fasting plasma glucose (FPG) concentration after 24 weeks of consumption.
Maize Cob Extract (MCE) is intended to be used as a bulking agent in food. The purpose of this study is to determine the glycaemic and insulinemic response of MCE consumed in isolation compared to glucose; the glycaemic and insulinemic response will also be determined for MCE alone and in combination with glucose. This is a randomised, double-blind, single-centre trial in 10 healthy male participants.
Dysglycemia is an important pre-risk condition which can potentially lead to diabetes if not adequately treated. The variation of glycemic balance can lead to cardiovascular disorders. The study will evaluate if Reglicem®, a nutraceutical containing Berberine, Curcumin, Inositol, Banaba, and Chromium Picolinate, can ameliorate glycemic status in patients with dysglycemia.
The aim will be to evaluate if Glicoset® 1000, a nutraceutical containing Ilex Paraguariensis, White Mulberry and Chromium Picolinate, can be effective in improving glycemic status in subject with dysglycemia.