View clinical trials related to Type2 Diabetes.
Filter by:Gut Dysbiosis had been involved in some way in the pathogenesis of some extra-intestinal disorders including metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and obesity.
To investigate the synergic therapeutic effect of thiazolidinediones and SGLT2 inhibitor on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, the effect of empagliflozin 10mg, pioglitazone 15mg monotherapy and combination therapy n patients with type 2 diabetes and fatty liver will be compared and analyzed. This study included a total of 60 patients (20 per subgroup) for randomized controlled trials with prospective, open label, randomized, single-institution clinical trials. The drug will be maintained for a total of six months. The primary endpoint is the difference of liver fat change measured by MRI-PDFF in co-localized regions of interest within nine liver segments between three groups.
The purpose of this study is to prove that the group treated with CKD-501 in combination added that the reduction of glycated hemoglobin superior to placebo treated group added in combination.
The weight reduction obtained after a first bariatric surgery would improve the vascular (correction of endothelial dysfunction, improvement of arterial wall compliance and evolution of the atherothrombotic process) and microcirculatory function in obese patients with type-2 diabetes.
The study will assess the glycemic variationusing continuous glucose monitoring system in type 2 diabetic patients with euglycemia control respectively when patients was treated with Basalin and one week after changing the insulin into Lantus.
The purpose of this study is to prove that the group treated with CKD-501 in combination added that the reduction of glycated hemoglobin superior to placebo treated group added in combination.
Glargine is commonly used in insulin supplemental therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes(T2D) at present. This study aims to investigate the current status of blood glucose control in patients with T2D treated with glargine. Glycated hemoglobin(HbA1c) will be tested in these patients to assess the blood glucose control and Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (CGMS) will be used to investigate the glucose variability. Islet function, duration of diabetes, complications, exercise, insulin dose, oral medication regimen and insulin antibodies will be recorded in detail. This study will analysis the association between these clinical characteristics and blood glucose control.
Three pieces of information lead to the basis for this study: 1. Individuals with Type-2 diabetes commonly develop peripheral neuropathy. 2. Increased production of the hormone amylin occurs in individuals who have Type-2 diabetes. 3. Aggregations of amylin was found in the peripheral vasculature of rats that overexpressed human amylin. The purpose of this study is to determine whether a correlation exists between the amount of amylin present in the upper extremities of human subjects with Type-2 diabetes and the extent to which symptoms of peripheral neuropathy are expressed in those subjects. The investigators will be testing this by initially collecting blood and skin biopsy samples from subjects, followed by measuring patient sensation and pain responses to heat, cold, and pressure in the upper extremities.
The population of type 2 diabetes increased enormously worldwide. As disease progression, uncontrolled type 2 diabetes patients need multiple daily insulin injections, but the risk of body weight gain and hypoglycemia will increase. In recent years, the newly oral anti-hypoglycemic agents developed, such as dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP4i) and sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i). The former indirectly stimulate insulin secretion and suppress glucagon through increase incretin. The later inhibit re-absorption of blood glucose in proximal renal tubule to improve hyperglycemia. According to the guideline published in 2017 by American diabetes Associations, if patients received premix insulin injections twice daily and their glycemic control can't meet the target, increase the frequency of injection such as basal bolus would be considered. However, it is difficult for some patients and it may cause more hypoglycemia and gain of body weight. Because previous report revealed dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors or sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors added to insulin resulted in better glycemic control, but there was no direct comparison, so we design this study to observe the efficacy of these two drugs in uncontrolled diabetes patient received twice daily insulin injections.
One-center randomized, three-arm, parallel, superiority, controlled trial in 132 elderly outpatients with type 2 diabetes. Two different combined exercise training doses (300min/week vs 150min/week) will be compared against usual care. The entire study length will last 24 weeks, and assessments will be conducted at baseline, previously to the group allocation, at 12 weeks and at 24 weeks just after the treatments' end. The study's primary outcome is the glycated hemoglobin level at 24 weeks. Secondary outcomes of clinical relevance to type 2 diabetes and elderlies will also be acquired.