Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Browse 7,874 clinical trials for diabetes. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
Find trials near:
Showing 3001-3020 of 7,874 trials
NCT05521893
This is a a single-centre, parallel, randomized controlled trial in women with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). Women are randomized to routine monthly prenatal clinic care (standard care group) or a group sending daily glucose readings via an application installed on a smartphone and monthly individual videoconferences replacing in-person visits (telemedicine group). The overall aim is to compare the effectiveness of the combine synchronous and asynchronous telemedicine care with the standard care in women with GDM.
NCT03658512
Diabetes mellitus is a widespread disease with increasing prevalence worldwide. Patients with diabetes can develop multiple late complications such as neuropathy, retinopathy, nephropathy and cardiovascular comorbidities. So far, there are no reliable predictive tools or markers to estimate if, when and to what extent a patient with diabetes develops late complications. For the patients quality of life and for health economic reasons an improved risk assessment would be desirable. The prospective TUEDID study will characterize diabetic patients to look out for parameters the predict progression of diabetes and its complications.
NCT04978649
Lowering of blood pressure (BP) in high-risk hypertensive individuals reduces major adverse cardiovascular (CV) and renal events. Diabetic patients with hypertension benefit from BP lowering treatment. The present trial, IPAD-CKD in brief, is a randomized, open-label, parallel-designed, multicenter study involving nearly 5322 patients to be recruited over three years and to be followed up for a median of four years and a half. IPAD-CKD tests the hypothesis that antihypertensive medications in adults with type 2 diabetes, whose seated BP 120-139 mm Hg systolic and below 90 mm Hg diastolic, results in 20% difference in the incidence of major renal events. During follow-up for participants in the intensive group, the sitting systolic pressure should be decreased to below 120 mm Hg, by titration and combination of the double-blind study medications of an angiotensin type-1 receptor blocker Allisartan (240 mg/day), a dihydropyridine calcium-channel blocker (amlodipine 5-10 mg/day), and/or other medications if necessary. For those in the standard group, the sitting systolic pressure should be monitored and controlled below 140 mm Hg.