View clinical trials related to Type2 Diabetes.
Filter by:Previous studies have shown that improving vitamin D status among the elderly may lead to an improvement in some inflammatory markers, especially with patients with type 2 diabetes. The aim of our trial is study the effect of vitamin D supplementation on inflammatory markers in patients having type 2 diabetes.
This project will provide an exercise-based lifestyle intervention with the potential to reduce complications for patients with short standing type 2 diabetes (T2D). While exercise is widely accepted as a component of T2D management, little is known about the additive effect of exercise when combined with a diet on T2D pathophysiology and mechanisms believed to lead to micro- and macrovascular complications. Moreover, the necessary dose of exercise to revert the progression of T2D and the related complications has not been investigated. A large-scale randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be essential to document the effectiveness on reducing the risk of T2D complications. However, prior to conducting a large-scale RCT, we need to specify the exercise dose that efficiently compliments the diet. In a 4-armed randomized, clinical trial (N=80 T2D patients, T2D duration < than 7 years) we aim to investigate 1) the potential additive role of exercise on pancreatic β-cell function in patients with T2D when combined with a diet, 2) the causal relationship between lifestyle-induced reductions in glycaemic variability, oxidative stress and low-grade inflammation and, 3) the role of exercise in rescuing dysregulated muscle progenitor cells. The participants will be randomly allocated to either a) control, b) diet, c) diet and exercise 3 times/week or d) diet and exercise 6 times/week for 16 weeks. Prior to, during and following the interventions, all participants will undergo extensive testing.
A Randomized, Open-label, Multiple-dose, Crossover Study to Investigate the Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic Drug-Drug Interaction of Evogliptin 5 mg and Empagliflozin 25 mg or Dapagliflozin 10 mg after Oral Administration in Healthy Male Adults
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.
This open-labeled, prospective, observational, 3-year, clinical study was conducted to compare the effectiveness and safety between empagliflozin (25 mg once daily) and dapagliflozin (10 mg once daily) in patients with inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes despite preexisting triple OAD combination.
To examine whether Konjac-mannan fiber improves metabolic control measured by glycemia, lipidemia, and blood pressure in individuals with type-2 diabetes.
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.
Obesity and insulin resistance are worldwide epidemic and taking a major public health toll. Obesity also increases the risk for cognitive impairment which is also an increasing medical, societal, and economic challenge. The ultimate goal of this proposal is to develop a statistical model to assess systemic cross-talk between brain, peripheral tissues, gut microbiota and glucose metabolism. Integrated with exercise training intervention the results will be utilized to provide disease risk profiling and personalized predictions of exercise training as a drug free treatment for insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.
The aim of this study is to investigate the beneficial role of ertugliflozin, a new SGLT2 inhibitor, in cardiac function via measuring GLS as well as other hemodynamic factors using echocardiogram in patients with T2D and HF, who are not controlled with oral antidiabetic medications including DPP4 inhibitors.
Insomnia is a common sleep disorder, with three main symptoms: difficulty in initiating sleep, difficulty in maintaining sleep, and/or waking up early without ability to return to sleep. Insomnia can contribute to metabolic dysfunction, which can lead to type 2 diabetes (T2D). Diabetes self-care behavior (DSCB) is important in attaining and maintaining glycemic control, which worsens as a result of fatigue. People with insomnia usually suffer from fatigue and inconstant sleep schedule, which negatively influence quality of life. However, the additive effect of behavioral sleep intervention on diabetes outcomes and health status in people with T2D is unknown. Therefore, The overall purpose of this study is to investigate the impact of both insomnia symptoms and CBT-I on people with T2D. The central hypotheses are that people with T2D and insomnia symptoms will have worse sleep, diabetes measures and self-reported outcomes compared to people with T2D only, which might be adjusted with CBT-I.