View clinical trials related to Type2 Diabetes.
Filter by:Accessible and effective interventions for chronic diseases such as diabetes are especially needed in the under-resourced patient population. This is a pilot randomized control trial compares usual diabetic care to usual diabetic care plus virtual health coaching utilizing lifestyle action plans in under-resourced adult type II diabetic patients. This is a one-site study at an under-resourced family medicine residency clinic. The primary outcome is the change of insulin resistance as measured by HOMA2-IR. Secondary metabolic outcomes are being tracked. Potentially confounding variables related to SDoH, race, and engagement in health coaching are being assessed for. The cost of the intervention as well as expensive healthcare utilization as measured by ER visits are also being tracked.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a metabolic condition characterized by chronic hyperglycemia and progressive insulin resistance, which progressively lead to macro- and microvascular damage and subsequent impairments in blood pressure (BP) control. Therapeutic approaches to manage T2DM focus on improving glycaemic control and BP and include pharmaceutical treatments (e.g. Metformin and insulin), physical activity and exercise, and calorie restriction. However, pharmaceutical interventions can be expensive and are associated with low adherence. Although exercise and diet programs have been shown to be effective, like pharmaceutical interventions, they often have poor adherence in people with T2DM. With the number of people with T2DM (464 million) continuing to rise and expected to reach 700 million by 2045, the costs associated with the clinical management of this condition are likely to become unsustainable. There is, therefore, a need to explore the potential of alternative interventions. In particular, interventions which may be cheaper than clinical management and have better adherence than exercise, and hypoglycemic agents, to improve glycemic control and deleterious cardiovascular manifestations of this condition. Passive heating may be one such intervention with therapeutic potential.
The purpose of this study is to look at feasibility (the likelihood) of continued use of the FreeStyle Libre 2 Continuous glucose monitor (CGM) when started at the time of hospital discharge in patients with poorly controlled diabetes and to look at the effects of CGM use on blood glucose control and quality of life. Additional information will be collected to determine the barriers to continuing CGM use after discharge. The investigators will also collect information to see how well blood glucose has been controlled after discharge while utilizing the CGM.
The pharmacological approaches in the treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) have advanced radically during the last decades. However, focus on long-term management of body weight, which is an essential part of treatment success, is often lacking. Excluding surgery, there are only a few effective treatment methods for obesity. Management of obesity is also greatly challenged by weight regain, which is common after a successful lifestyle intervention. Weight regain typically results in the deterioration of glucose homeostasis in T2DM. However, understanding the pathomechanisms of weight regain and subsequent worsening of glucose homeostasis is still insufficient. Therefore, T2DM treatment programs that target long-term weight management have been scarce. This study aims to fill the gaps in the current knowledge by advancing the development of treatment programs for T2DM that simultaneously head for improved glucose metabolism and improved long-term body weight control.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to investigate the effects of a dance intervention performed at home, on cardiovascular risk factors and functional capacity of elderly individuals with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus. Comparison will be performed with a walking exercise intervention, performed outside. Dance sessions will be guided online by an expertise instructor, and walking sessions will be performed at a self-selected intensity, with no simultaneous supervision. All participants will complete an exercise diary after each exercise session (reporting perception of subjective effort, affective responses, and others).The participants will include men and women between 65 and 80 years old, with body mass index inferior to 35 Kg /m2. The main outcome of this study is the peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak). The secondary outcomes are cardiovascular risk associated factors (C-reactive protein, TNF-alpha, lipid profile, etc) and functional performance (muscle strength and power, balance, gate ability, etc). Cognitive skills (executive function and memory) will be also assessed. The experimental design will include a control period of four weeks, two sessions of assessments before and after the interventions, and twelve weeks of dancing or walking interventions, performed three times a week, in non-consecutive days, with 60 min duration.
This is a Phase 1, first in human (FiH), randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, single ascending dose (SAD) and multiple ascending dose (MAD) study to investigate the safety, tolerability, PK and PD of DD01 administered by subcutaneous (SC) injection in overweight/obese subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The study will be conducted in 2 Parts (Part A and B), with up to 8 cohorts included in each part (Part A; Cohorts A1 to A8 and Part B; Cohorts B2 to B8).
The study is prepared to use CMR technology for early screening of myocardial lesions in 561 age-matched women with type 2 diabetes without PCOS, with PCOS without type 2 diabetes and with type 2 diabetes combined with PCOS, compare the differences between the two groups of cardiomyocyte injury changes, and treat and follow-up with type 2 diabetes and PCOS in accordance with the current standard treatment guidelines for type 2 diabetes and PCOS, after 3 years of follow-up we will analyse the changes in cardiomyopathy, cardiac serological indicators, and heart function indicators,which can provide theoretical basis for early clinical intervention in the future.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the effect of the WW program on people with Type 2 diabetes and the effect on glycemic control. This study will be a 6 month prospective, single arm clinical trial coordinated by Pennington Biomedical Research Center. Up to 150 participants will be recruited across 3 sites. Participants will have Type 2 diabetes and overweight/obesity.
The aim of the study is to investigate the effect of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) on pancreatic alpha and beta-cell function and for the sensitivity of incretin hormones in patients with pre-operative type 2 diabetes. Primary hypotheses: - After RYGB, the sensitivity to GLP-1 and GIP is improved (improved insulinotropic effect). - After RYGB, the insulin secretion improves during an oral glucose tolerance test within 3 months postoperatively. - After RYGB, the insulin secretion during intraveneous stimulation with glucose or non-glucose (arginin) is unchanged.
Hispanic adults are twice as likely to have type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) and 1.5 times more likely to die from the disease than non-Hispanic whites. These disparities are mediated, in part, by less healthful levels of physical activity, dietary quality, medication adherence, and self-monitoring of blood glucose than non-Hispanic whites. Innovative approaches that arise from affected communities are needed to address these health disparities. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) has been successful in targeting health issues among Hispanic and immigrant populations; CBPR is an effective approach for addressing health behaviors in a sociocultural context. In 2004, the research team developed a CBPR partnership between immigrant communities and academic institutions called Rochester Healthy Community Partnership (RHCP) Storytelling or narrative-based interventions are designed to incorporate culture-centric health messaging to promote behavior change among vulnerable populations. Digital storytelling interventions are narrative-based videos elicited through a CBPR approach to surface the authentic voices of individuals overcoming obstacles toward engaging in health promoting behaviors to shape positive health behaviors of viewers through influences on attitudes and beliefs. RHCP partners from Hispanic communities identified T2D as a priority area for intervention, and have co-created each of the formative phases leading up to this proposal. Narrative theory and social cognitive theory formed the conceptual basis for intervention development. The study team conducted surveys and focus groups to derive the approach and personnel for building an authentic intervention that was created in a digital storytelling workshop where stories about diabetes self-management were captured, recorded, and edited to derive the final intervention products in video forma. The respective digital storytelling videos were pilot tested with 25 patients across healthcare institutions in Minnesota and Arizona. The intervention was rated as highly acceptable, culturally relevant, and perceived as efficacious for motivating behavioral change. The overall objective of this project is therefore to assess the efficacy of a digital storytelling intervention derived through a CBPR approach on self-management of T2D among Hispanic adults during a pandemic.