Clinical Trials Logo

Hyperglycemia Stress clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Hyperglycemia Stress.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05447806 Recruiting - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Diabetes Clinical Decision Support

Start date: July 15, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the impact of an electronic medical record clinical decision support tool on rates of dysglycemia in the hospital, and its clinical and economical outcomes. The study also evaluates the perspectives of providers regarding the tool's usefulness on disease management support, knowledge, and practice performance.

NCT ID: NCT04862234 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hyperglycemia Stress

Perioperative Stress Hyperglycemia in General and Vascular Surgery Patients

Start date: July 29, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Hyperglycemia is seen in approximately 30% of patients who do not have a history of diabetes and undergo general surgery. Hyperglycemia in this setting is associated with increased risk of postoperative complications. The purpose of this study is to investigate risk factors for developing high sugars during the time of surgery, and if these high sugars can be prevented by the use of an injectable diabetes medication (dulaglutide) prior to surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04797208 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Remote Glucose Monitoring in Hospital Settings

REMOTE-CGM
Start date: January 9, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Use of real-time continuous glucose monitoring (RT-CGM) systems in inpatient settings especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, may allow hospital staff to remotely monitor glucose while reducing viral exposure and preserving use of PPE. RT-CGM may be of benefit to inpatients with unstable glycaemia and at risk of severe hypoglycaemia, as it can automatically alert the treating clinical team of hypo and hyperglycaemia. This is of clinical relevance as up to 45% of inpatients with diabetes were found to have asymptomatic hypoglycaemia events in hospital, especially overnight. It may therefore provide a safer method of monitoring glycaemia in hospital compared to conventional bedside capillary glucose testing, by minimising the likelihood of hyper- and hypoglycaemic events and their known associated worse outcomes. The aim of this pilot study is to to demonstrate that use of Dexcom G6 RT-CGM may provide a safer and effective method of monitoring glycemia in hospital. Data from this pilot study will be used to design and implement a larger multi-centre pivotal trial.

NCT ID: NCT04021186 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgery--Complications

An Optimization in the Postoperative Treatment in Head and Neck--surgical Patients.

Start date: July 5, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Based on glycemic load (overall increase in blood glucose), it is investigated whether better glycemic control (large fluctuations in blood glucose to abnormal values are attempted) can improve the postoperative phase of head and neck surgical patients who receive Dexamethasone (glucocorticoid). Furthermore it is examined whether this optimization in treatment can result in reduced hospitalization time and fewer re-admissions. Hypothesis: Continuous blood glucose measurement and insulin therapy will optimize the postoperative phase of the embedded head and neck patient receiving Dexamethasone by reducing the incidence of hyperglycaemia and associated complications.