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Active clinical trials for "Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2"

Results 481-490 of 7770

The PRECISION-T2D Study: Precision Nutrition Study for Type 2 Diabetes

Type 2 Diabetes

Food plays a crucial role in determining blood glucose levels, especially in people with type 2 diabetes. Precision nutrition, which involves individually tailored dietary interventions, can be a powerful tool in managing blood glucose levels in people with type 2 diabetes. Previous studies found that changes in gut microbiota resulted from the dietary intervention, such as plant-based diet, might subsequently lead to different glycemic responses, and then different health outcomes. In this study, the investigators will characterize the blood glucose dynamics and gut microbiota of individuals with type 2 diabetes. They aim to assess the influence of plant-based diet on gut microbiota; they will also investigate the influence of gut microbiota on glycemic responses. Additionally, a series of individual N-of-1 trails will be integrated to compare the effects of a white bread breakfast and a whole wheat bread breakfast on glucose metabolism at the individual level.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Effects of Sitagliptin in Individuals With Genetically Decreased DPP4

Genetics DiseaseType2 Diabetes1 more

This is a pilot clinical trial to test the hypothesis that during sitagliptin (DPP4 inhibitor), individuals heterozygous for DPP4 loss of function variants will have a reduction in DPP4 activity and antigen, lower glucose after a mixed meal, and higher levels of intact DPP4 substrates compared to during placebo and compared to matched controls.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

Pathobiology of Remission of Type 2 Diabetes

Newly Diagnosed Type 2 DiabetesObese

We propose to investigate effects of HP and HC weight loss diets in Newly Diagnosed T2DM (NT2DM) women and men for 6 months for remission of Type 2 Diabetes. Our long term goal is to establish a weight loss diet plan for remission of NT2DM which would be adaptable for use in physicians' clinics and metabolomics predictors for assessment of remission. The overall objective of this study is to determine if remission of NT2DM can be induced by dietary manipulation using a HP diet and the pathobiology of this remission. We hypothesize that NT2DM subjects will have remission to NGT on the HP diet when they are provided the food and daily menus for compliance. The rationale is the HP diet is palatable for subjects to continue after the 6 month study and stay in remission using diet plans we provide. We will compare the effects of the HP vs HC diet on remission. Specific aims of this study are to determine the effects of the HP and HC diets on NT2DM obese subjects in a 6 month feeding study and determine: (a)remission of NT2DM to Normal Glucose Tolerance(NGT), (b)weight loss, (c)improvements in metabolic markers, Cardiovascular Risk Factors(CVR), and inflammation markers, and epigenetic DNA methylation changes and pathways involved with remission and metabolomic markers to establish predictive markers of remission of NT2DM. We propose to use a non-pharmaceutical means (HP diet) for remission of T2DM and weight loss and determine the pathobiology involved in improvement in metabolic and CVRs by interrogating the samples with emerging technologies. The proposed research is significant because if we can demonstrate the HP diet cause remission of NT2DM to NGT along with other metabolic improvements, it would be a significant improvement in health risk and medical cost to subjects.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Raclopride-PET/MRT

Diabetes MellitusType 2

Cerebral insulin resistance plays an important role in the development of obesity and diabetes mellitus type 2. The aim of this project is to examine the effect of human nasal insulin on the dopaminergic system. Therefore, characteristics of cerebral dopamine receptors before and after administration of nasal insulin vs. placebo shall be analyzed in a randomized way. Moreover, the investigators plan to examine the insulin action on cortical and subcortical activation in humans and the interaction of dopamine metabolism with [11C]-Raclopride-PET/MRI. By performing fMRI measurements, insulin sensitivity of the central nervous system can be investigated simultaneously. Recruiting is planed as a two-step process.First 12 normal-weight (BMI 20-25 kg/m²) men should be examined. If first results show a insulin-dependent effect on the availability of dopamine receptors in the human brain, recruitment of 12 overweight men will get started.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Family Model DSME in FBOs in the RMI

Diabetes MellitusType 2

Health disparities in the Republic of the Marshall Islands are striking, with extremely high rates of type 2 diabetes. Documented prevalence of type 2 diabetes in the Marshall Islands ranges from 20%-50%.This is significantly higher than the global (8.5%) and United States (11%) prevalence. Diabetes doubles the risk of heart disease; is the leading cause of kidney failure, lower limb amputation, and acquired blindness; and reduces life expectancy by as much as 15 years. Diabetes self-management education and support is critical for persons with diabetes. This study aims to conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial using a wait-list control to evaluate the effectiveness of family model diabetes self-management education and support when delivered in faith-based organizations (i.e., churches) in Marshallese by trained community health workers. The study will be conducted with up to 288 participants with type 2 diabetes and up to 288 of their family members. The primary study outcome will be glycemic control as measured by HbA1c. Secondary biometric measures include: fasting glucose, weight, body mass index, and blood pressure. Survey data will be collected pre-intervention, immediately post-intervention, four months post-intervention, and 12 months post-intervention for the intervention arm of the study. The control arm of the study will have two pre-intervention data collections before beginning the intervention. Data will then be collected from the control group immediately post-intervention, four months post-intervention, and 12 months post intervention.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Physical Activity Drop-out Ratio in Patients Living With Type 2 Diabetes

Diabetes MellitusType 23 more

Physical activity (PA) - understood as any bodily movement produced by skeletal muscular that requires energy expenditure, related to leisure time, for transport to get to and from places, or part of a person's work - is a powerful force for good regarding type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, fewer T2DM patients sustain the lifestyle recommendations suggested by health care professionals (HCP): 40% of patients did not follow-up on general medical recommendations regarding lifestyle changes. Using a socio-ecological approach - that aims to deal with the different levels of PA influences - may be a good solution to integrate the behaviour change techniques in health care professionals' consultations to prescribe PA efficiently. The investigators' protocol has two aims. The primary aim is to evaluate the effectiveness of theory-driven PA intervention based on SEM among people living with T2DM. A secondary aim is to explore the feasibility and perceptions/experiences on the PA adherence process in T2DM patients while using the socio-ecological approach and to understand the HCP's viewpoint in its applicability in the Spanish Healthcare system. The investigators want to know the how, not the what, related to PA prescription.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Weight Loss Clinical Decision Support

Diabetes MellitusType 21 more

Despite steady increases in obesity prevalence, the more than 12 million obese U.S. adults with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and severe obesity encounter a number of barriers to adopting effective surgical and pharmaceutical treatments, including: (a) both patients and primary care clinicians frequently underestimate the effectiveness and potential benefits of obesity treatments; and (b) both patients and clinicians typically lack access to evidence-based estimates of the patient-specific potential benefits and risks of appropriate obesity treatment options. This project addresses these important obstacles to evidence-based obesity care by providing accurate, patient-specific estimates of benefits and risks of various obesity treatment options to inform shared decision making about obesity treatment. In this project the study team will implement a scalable, web-based point-of-care decision-support intervention in primary care that provides patient-specific estimates of obesity treatment benefits and risks in a randomized trial in 40 primary care clinics with 15,810 eligible patients, and assess intervention impact on (i) appropriate active management of obesity in eligible patients, (ii) weight trajectories, and (iii) patient and clinician satisfaction with the decision support intervention.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Reducing Metabolic Dysregulation in Obese Latina Breast Cancer Survivors Using Physical Activity...

Breast CancerCoronary Artery Disease2 more

This study is about testing whether exercise will improve fitness and lessen risk factors related to heart disease, diabetes, and obesity in Latina breast cancer survivors.

Recruiting31 enrollment criteria

Canagliflozin and Myocardial Micro-perfusion

Type 2 DiabetesCardiovascular Diseases1 more

Recently, large clinical intervention studies have demonstrated the cardiovascular protective effects on of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) such as empagliflozin, dapagliflozin, and canagliflozin in reduction of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality, coincident with a significant reduction in heart failure hospitalizations. Therefore, SGLT2i had been recommended as a therapeutic drug for diabetic patients to reduce the occurrence of cardiovascular events. However, the mechanism of these benefits remains unclear at the present time. Myocardial fibrosis is not only an important physiopathological mechanism of heart failure, but also has been shown to be closely associated with the risk of heart failure-related hospitalization and death, especially in patients with T2D. However, whether SGLT2i can exert cardioprotective effects by improving myocardial fibrosis remains to be further investigated. In recent years, the development of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) technology enables to detect focal and diffuse fibrosis in myocardial tissue, which makes it possible to systematically explore the role of SGLT2i on myocardial fibrosis. Although several studies including EMPA-HEART, SUGAR-DM-HF have explored the effects of SGLT2i on cardiac structure and function, these studies didn't reach consistent results. In addition, more scarce studies have investigated the effects of SGLT2i on both focal and diffuse fibrosis. At present, whether SGLT2i treatment can change the relevant indicators of myocardial fibrosis in people with diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors has not yet been reported. In addition, previous studies mainly focus on empagliflozin and dapagliflozin, and studies on canagliflozin are still very scarce. Therefore, this study intends to explore the effects of canagliflozin on myocardial fibrosis and other structures and functions of the heart in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and high cardiovascular risk factors.

Recruiting21 enrollment criteria

High-Protein Diets and Diabetes

Type 2 Diabetes

High-protein (HP) diets are popular and evidence indicates they are more likely to be adhered to and produce more sustained weight loss, particularly under ad libitum conditions. They also improve glucose control and so may be helpful for treatment of Type 2 Diabetes (T2D), particularly in the short-term, possibly via an improvement in insulin secretion. Indeed, HP diets may be uniquely effective at promoting insulin secretion in T2D, but further research is needed to understand why HP. Thus, there is an urgent need to determine how HP diets affect T2D pathophysiology of insulin secretion and action using direct measures of β-cell dysfunction and insulin sensitivity. It is also imperative to know how the type of protein (animal vs. non-animal) affects insulin secretion in order to ultimately obtain an environmentally and economically sustainable HP diet that can improve glucose control and T2D pathophysiology in the long-term as well as providing patients with a greater choice for dietary management of T2D.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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