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Active clinical trials for "Hypoglycemia"

Results 131-140 of 556

Evaluation of the Function "Stop Before Hypoglycemia" on External Insulin Pump

Type I Diabetes

This study compares the apparition of hypoglycaemia in type I diabetic patients between 2 phases: the one without the use of SmartGuard® function and the one with the use of SmartGuard® function.

Terminated7 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of Glucagon In the Prevention of Hypoglycemia During Mild Exercise

Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

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.

Terminated43 enrollment criteria

Sitagliptin Versus Sulphonylurea in Type 2 Diabetes During Ramadan

DiabetesHypoglycemia

This study will assess if Sitagliptin addition to metformin or glitazone is better than current sulphonylurea based treatments during Ramadan. The rationale is that Sitagliptin offers metabolic advantages primarily with the low incidence of hypoglycemia over current sulphonylurea based treatments.

Terminated11 enrollment criteria

SugarFACT - Sugar Requirements For African Children Trial

Hypoglycemia Non DiabeticsEmergencies2 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of dextrose administration in severely sick children admitted to hospital with low-glycaemia. The problem: Mortality in children remains high in sub-Saharan African hospitals. While antimalarial drugs, antibiotics and other definitive treatments are well understood, the role of emergency care with supportive therapies such as maintaining normal glucose and electrolyte balances, has been given limited attention. Hypoglycaemia is common in children admitted to hospital in low-income settings. The current definition of hypoglycaemia is a blood glucose level of less than 2.5mmol/l. Outcomes for these children are poor, with a mortality rate of up to 42%. An increased mortality has also been reported among acutely ill children with low-glycaemia, defined as a blood glucose level of 2.5-5.0mmol/l. The reason for increased mortality rates is not fully understood. Study objective: To determine the impact on mortality of a raised treatment cut-off level for paediatric hypoglycaemia, from 2.5mmol/l to 5.0mmol/l. Methodology: Severely ill children admitted to two central Malawian hospitals; Queen Elisabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre and Zomba Central Hospital, with low-glycaemia (2.5-5.0mmol/l) will be randomised into intervention or control groups. The intervention group will be treated with an intravenous bolus of 10% dextrose 5ml/kg followed by a dextrose infusion in addition to standard care while the control group will receive standard care only. Children will be followed until discharge from hospital or death. Primary end-point is in-hospital mortality.

Terminated14 enrollment criteria

Effect of CGM With Predictive Alarm on Hypoglycemia in Young Patients With T1D.

Type 1 Diabetes

The use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is becoming the new standard in glycometabolic control in patients with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM) even in subjects in multiple daily insulin injections (MDI). Compared to self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG), the CGM systems allow continuous monitoring of the glycemic trends contributing to modify the therapeutic habits of adult and pediatric patients with T1DM and allowing to better managing of critical situations such as hypoglycemia. Recently, the accuracy and reliability performance of the latest generation of CGMs using predictive alarm for hypoglycaemia and hyperglycemia has been compared to other commercially available CGM systems, showing good levels of concordance. The use of this new technology, through the continuous monitoring of the pre-and post-prandial glucose levels and the evaluation of the glycemic trends, could influence the therapeutic habits of patients and could substantially contribute to modifying insulin therapy. Furthermore, the presence of the predictive alarm technology for hypoglycemia could lead to reduce the number of hypoglycemic episodes and to modify the way these hypoglycemic episodes are managed; moreover, the use of this technology could improve the time spent in the target glycemic range [Time in Range (TIR), 70-180 mg/dl] with possible improvement also in glycemic variability control.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Artificial Pancreas With Carbohydrate Suggestion for Patients With Type 1 Diabetes Prone to Hypoglycemia...

Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus Prone to Hypoglycemia

Achieving near-normoglycemia has been established as the main objective for most patients with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D). Automated insulin delivery (AID) systems, the so-called artificial pancreas (AP) or closed-loop systems, may represent the ideal solution, especially for patients not reaching the therapeutic goals with multiples doses of insulin or open-loop delivery systems. Despite the advances in recent years that have proven the efficacy and safety of these devices in clinical trials and clinical practice settings, such evidence cannot be extrapolated to highly unstable patients, as problematic hypoglycemia remains an exclusion criterion in most of the trials. The SAFE-AP system is a single-hormone hybrid closed-loop controller based on a proportional derivative with an insulin feedback controller that integrates a safety layer with insulin-on-board constraints and sliding mode reference conditioning. The hybrid closed-loop system includes a second safety feedback loop with a controller that triggers carbohydrate recommendations to the patient. Both control loops are coordinated to ensure that the counter-regulatory effect of rescue carbohydrates is not counteracted with insulin. Such system has been previously proven effective in unannounced exercise, one of the main challenges in AID systems development. Additionally, the algorithm has been recently tailored to achieve a better control in the subgroup of T1D patients prone to hypoglycemia. In this project, a rigorous clinical testing of the SAFE-AP system will be carried out in 12 patients with T1D and problematic hypoglycemia, despite treatment with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion. The safety and performance of the system will be evaluated in a 32-hour pilot study, including 4 meals, one overnight period and 2 unannounced aerobic exercise sessions. The study will be performed in a hospital setting with the on-site supervision of a specialized nurse and a diabetologist, as well as an engineer in remote control.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Late Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Diagnosis in Obese Women

Gestational Diabetes Mellitus in PregnancyMacrosomia9 more

In the current work, we aim to perform a prospective study that will investigate the relationship between maternal obesity (BMI >30 kg/m2) and morbid obesity (BMI >35 kg/m2) with a late GDM diagnosis (>32 weeks), with an emphasis on obstetric and neonatal outcomes.

Not yet recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Low-dose Dasiglucagon for Prevention of Insulin-Induced Hypoglycemia in People With Type 1 Diabetes...

Type 1 DiabetesHypoglycemia

The aim of the study is to compare the efficacy of low-dose dasiglucagon (Zealand Pharma, Denmark) to oral carbohydrate consumption for prevention of s.c. insulin-induced hypoglycemia in CSII- and MDI-treated people with type 1 diabetes.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Intervention to Reduce Fear of Hypoglycemia and Optimize Type 1 Diabetes Outcomes

Type1diabetesFear of Hypoglycemia

The overall objective and Primary Aim of this Limited Competition: Small Grant Program (R03) is to address the critical need of identifying and decreasing fear of hypoglycemia, which will be accomplished by conducting a pilot randomized clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of Blood Glucose Awareness Training, which has been adapted for, but never evaluated in adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) and their parents.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy of G-Pen Compared to Lilly Glucagon for Hypoglycemia Rescue in Adult Type 1...

HypoglycemiaDiabetes Mellitus1 more

This is a blinded, randomized crossover study to compare the safety and efficacy of G-Pen (glucagon injection) to Lilly Glucagon (glucagon for injection [rDNA origin]) for hypoglycemia rescue of adult patients with type 1 diabetes.

Completed25 enrollment criteria
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