View clinical trials related to Glucose Intolerance.
Filter by:Examination of the effect of one week's unhealthy lifestyle on glucose metabolism and liver parameters in a group of young, healthy males participating in Roskilde Festival 2016.
Prediabetes is a major risk factor for diabetes. The Lifestyle Modification Mobile Health Application (APP) could not only help to decrease blood sugar among individuals with prediabetes but it could also prevent a later occurrence of diabetes. While many people use traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) to improve the participants body constitution in Chinese culture, it rarely if ever obtained through a mobile device. There are very few apps that provide effective TCM regimen-based lifestyle advice for prediabetes. Therefore, the investigators want to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of receiving TCM regimen-based lifestyle advice from a mobile device designed to improve the applicant's health status.
The study is a randomized, cross-over, double blind, controlled trial in which study participants will receive two 4-week interventions with a washout period of 4 weeks between interventions. Study subjects will visit the research facility before and after each intervention period for a test day. In the third intervention week participants are provided with a 3-day controlled diet and glucose responses will be monitored via a continuous glucose monitoring device.
The goal of this protocol is to evaluate the effect of addhing linagliptin to patients with prediabetes who do not reverse to normoglycemia after 12 months of treatment with metformin alone. The duration of the study will be 6 months, and it is primarily a efficacy study. Main outcomes will be glucose levels during OGTT, insulin secretion and pancreatic beta cell function measured by the disposition index derived from the OGTT.
This study describes a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach to design a novel faith-enhancement to the diabetes prevention program (DPP) for AA women. A long-standing CBPR partnership designed the faith-enhancement from focus group data. The faith components were specifically linked to weekly DPP learning objectives to strategically emphasize behavioral skills with religious principles. Using a CBPR approach, the Better Me Within trial was able to enroll 12 churches, screen 333 AA women, and randomize 221 after collection of objective eligibility measures. A prospective, randomized, nested by church, design was used to evaluate the faith-enhanced DPP as compared to a standard DPP on weight, diabetes and cardiovascular risk, over a 16-week intervention and 10-month follow up.
This randomised controlled trial will determine if exercise (150 - 200 min per week, 6 weeks) can beneficially modify liver fat quality in non alcohol fatty liver disease patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (n = 26, 13 per group). Liver fat quality will be assessed via magnetic resonance (3T) spectroscopy (1H-MRS) using validated methods.
This study will evaluate whether long-term consumption of the low calorie sweetener stevia affects glucose tolerance in healthy participants. With regard to this aim, we will recruit 2 study groups, the stevia group where participants will be required to add stevia drops twice daily in their habitual drinks and the control group where participants will be asked not to change anything in their diet and lifestyle.
Recruitment strategies comparing different strategies.
The TREAT Pilot is a 3 months open-label pilot study to examine the effect of restricting the duration of eating (Time Restricted EATing) in metabolically unhealthy adults with overweight or obesity. This pilot study will allow the investigator to collect preliminary data for the design of a larger study.
This project will determine exercise capacity and molecular markers of the response to acute exercise in human subjects with impaired or normal glucose tolerance.