View clinical trials related to Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus.
Filter by:The aim of the study is to investigate the applicability of a Flash glucose monitoring sensor (Freestyle Libre, isCGM) for in-hospital glucose monitoring in patients with diabetes requiring nutritional therapy (tube feeding or parenteral feeding).
The aim of the study is to investigate the applicability of a Flash glucose monitoring sensor (Freestyle Libre, isCGM) for in-hospital glucose monitoring in patients with diabetes and hypoglycemia (<3,9 mmol/l) during the hospitalization
This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of how well blood glucose is managed when a participate wears the investigational SteadiSetâ„¢ Infusion Set (SteadiSet device) for up to 14 days post-insertion when compared to a Teflon Control infusion set.
The primary aim of this study is to measure (residual) beta cell mass in type 1 diabetes (T1D) patients with stable near-normal and unstable glucose control using PET/CT imaging, to improve the understanding of the relation between beta cell mass and glycemic control in T1D.
In patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D) that have undergone islet of Langerhans transplantation or are on the waiting list for transplantation, Ga-68-exendin PET imaging is performed to study the visualization of transplanted islet grafts in patients.
The purpose of this study is to find out whether the combination of insulin and pramlintide is better than insulin alone at helping the pancreas release glucagon in response to a low blood sugar episode. A secondary goal is to assess whether basal pramlintide will delay gastric emptying.
This open-label study will determine if chlorthalidone is safe and effective for the use of reducing urinary calcium excretion over 4 weeks in subjects with type 1 diabetes
Subjects will participate in three weeks of the bionic pancreas in the insulin-only configuration. Each week, subjects will use a different rapid acting insulin analog -- Humalog, Novolog, or BC222 insulin lispro -- in a randomized cross-over order.
Primary Objective: To evaluate the effect of virtual approach via novel technologies versus traditional study conduct on glycemic control in terms of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c). Secondary Objective: To evaluate the appropriate utilization of virtual approach via novel technologies during the study and to assess the effect of the virtual versus traditional study conduct on multiple outcomes in terms of study methodology and diabetes management.
The study will consist of two study arms. Each arm will include a 24-96 hour outpatient run-in period prior to their exercise visit wearing the bi-hormonal bionic pancreas. In random order subjects will then complete two approximately 5-hour exercise visits, one wearing the bi-hormonal bionic pancreas and one wearing the insulin-only bionic pancreas.