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NCT07260656
The purpose of this research is to assess whether the use of a topical cream with an active ingredient can reduce the amount of foot pain experienced in participants who have been diagnosed with Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy (DPN) with minimal side effects or discomfort from use.
NCT07425275
Diabetes patients commonly experience dry mouth also known as xerostomia which can affect eating speaking oral health and overall quality of life. This study evaluates whether simple oral care actions delivered by endocrinologists during routine diabetes clinic visits can improve dry mouth symptoms and oral health related quality of life. Endocrinologists will be trained to screen for dry mouth provide brief counseling prescribe saliva substitutes and refer patients to dental services when needed. Adult patients with diabetes and symptoms of dry mouth will be followed before and after the intervention to assess changes in xerostomia severity and oral health outcomes. The study will also explore barriers and facilitators to integrating oral health care into routine diabetes management in Pakistan.
NCT07377409
This study aims to evaluate the potential benefit of an oral nutritional supplement based on CRONILIEF™ (Palmitoylethanolamide Phospholipids) in diabetic subjects with neuropathic pain, compared to a placebo.
NCT07384247
DN is one of the most commonly used physical therapy (PT) interventions for managing trigger points (Tp). Evidence suggests that DN was equally effective as other PT interventions, compared to no treatment or Sham-DN. Electrical stimulation (ES) is also a commonly used non-invasive method for pain management during PT. Recently, several studies suggested that combining DN with ES may be more effective in trigger point release than DN alone. The goal of this clinical trial was to determine the effects that trigger point dry needling with and without electrical stimulation had on pain threshold. It would also learn about the effect the trigger point dry needling has on muscle activity in people with identified painful trigger points within the soleus and gastrocnemius muscle complex. The main questions it aims to answer are: * In terms of trigger point pain threshold, is DN combined with ES superior to DN alone, ES alone, or Sham treatment? * In terms of muscle activity, is DN with ES superior to DN only, ES only or Sham treatment? Researchers will compare dry needling with electrical stimulation, dry needling only, electrical stimulation only and a Sham treatment to see these interventions affect pain threshold and muscle activity. Participants will: * Randomly assigned as one of the four groups * Visit the clinic once for test * Receive permission and conduct intervention according to protocol.
NCT06025422
One in five foot ulcers are caused by the footwear worn by people with diabetes, yet there is a lack of consensus around footwear fit. Recommended toe gaps (the gap between the longest toe and the inside of the shoe) vary depending on the footwear guidance referred to but no research to date has assessed the recommendations' effectiveness in minimising in-shoe pressures. The investigators will carry out a pilot study in 60 people with diabetes and loss of foot sensation (neuropathy). In this study, the investigators will measure in-shoe pressures whilst participants walk at the same pace to the beat of a metronome. An insole placed inside participants' shoes will measure in-shoe pressures. Participants will wear the same (standardised) type of footwear. The study is designed to detect a difference in pressure within this made-to-measure footwear whose fit conforms to Standard 1 guidance compared with footwear whose fit conforms to Standard 2 guidance. Differences between Standards 1 and 2 with Standard 3 will be considered secondary analyses. Standards are simplified to three non-overlapping recommended toe gap ranges of 0.5-1.0cm; 1.5-2.0cm and 1.0-1.5cm. The investigators will also analyse the heat images taken with a thermographic camera before and after walking in standardised footwear whose fit confirms to these standards (this is known as the plantar thermal stress response to walking). Footwear fit will be determined by measuring the dimensions of participants' feet and that of participants' footwear and comparing the two. The investigators will also measure footwear fit and associated in-shoe pressure/plantar thermal stress response in participants' habitual footwear during walking at paced and self-selected speeds.
NCT06995352
Postoperative pain remains undertreated. Opioids have well-known limitations for both individuals and society, and while single-injection peripheral nerve blocks with unencapsulated local anesthetic provide potent analgesia, their duration is measured in hours while post-surgical pain usually outlasts this duration. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks prolong analgesia but may possibly be replaced with liposomal bupivacaine with a reported duration of up to 72-96 hours (Schwartz. J Clin Anesth 2024). In comparison to continuous peripheral nerve blocks, liposomal bupivacaine eliminates a time-consuming catheter insertion as well as the risks of catheter dislodgement, localized infection, local anesthetic leakage, and infusion pump malfunction. Furthermore, liposomal bupivacaine significantly reduces the burden on both patients and healthcare providers as it does not require the use of a portable infusion pump, local anesthetic reservoir, or perineural catheter to be carried, managed, or eventually removed. Notably, the potential for local anesthetic-induced myotoxicity, and cardiac/neurologic toxicity is reduced or negated altogether. And the cost of liposome bupivacaine is less than the combined cost of a catheter set, insertion equipment, portable infusion pump, large reservoir of local anesthetic, and healthcare provider oversight. Therefore, should a single injection of liposomal bupivacaine be demonstrated to provide at least non-inferior analgesia and opioid sparing as a continuous peripheral nerve block, it would be a far superior analgesic benefiting patients, providers, hospitals, and payers such as Medicare and private health insurance. Randomized, active-controlled clinical trials are required to compare the newer liposomal bupivacaine to continuous peripheral nerve blocks. The ultimate objective of the proposed research study is to determine if liposomal bupivacaine in a peripheral nerve block is at least non-inferior to a continuous peripheral nerve block following moderate-to-severely painful ankle surgery. This is a single-center clinical trial. The investigators will randomize participants to either a liposomal bupivacaine combined with unencapsulated bupivacaine single-injection popliteal-sciatic and saphenous nerve block group, or single injections of unencapsulated bupivacaine followed by a continuous popliteal-sciatic bupivacaine infusion.
NCT04055090
The purpose of this study is to explore the overall safety profile and durability of efficacy of Engensis (VM202) in painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy. All subjects still in follow-up for the VMDN-003 study or who have completed the Day 270 visit within the prior 90 days will be approached to enroll in the long-term safety extension study.
NCT06483620
PURPOSE: This study will translate, culturally adapt, validate, and test the reliability of the Neuro Qol Arabic version to be used with diabetic patients in Arabic countries. Background: The Neuropathy- and Foot Ulcer-Specific Quality of Life instrument is a multidimensional scale was developed to assess the QoL of diabetic patients with peripheral neuropathy. Producing Arabic versions of the Translating Scale can help researchers investigate offloading treatment among the Arabic population with DFUs. Hypotheses: The study design was a cross-cultural validation of NeuroQol, the Arabic version, for patients with DFUs. Research Question: Will there be cultural adaptation, validation, and reliability between the (Neuro Qol) Arabic version and the original language?
NCT05247034
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a high incidence disease in Mexico and is associated with the development of chronic degenerative complications such as diabetic neuropathy. The latter manifests itself as a set of disorders that occur as a consequence of a chronic hyperglycemic state that can induce oxidative stress and inflammation, resulting in damage to the autonomic and peripheral nervous system. In Mexico, it has been reported that this complication usually occurs between 29% and 90% of patients with diabetes. Cocoa is a food with a high content of flavonoids, which are phenolic compounds with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. Additionally, its consumption has been associated with a decrease in hyperglycemia and insulin resistance, improvement in mitochondrial function, and, based on the above, an effect on diabetic complications has been suggested; This has been demonstrated in in vivo and in vitro models, but not in the human population. Once the symptoms of diabetic neuropathy have started, palliative treatments are prescribed, and to date there are no pharmacological compounds that have been shown to reverse the consequences of diabetic peripheral and autonomic neuropathy. Additionally, clinical trials of compounds with antioxidant properties have only performed subjective evaluations based on questionnaires on the perception of the improvement of diabetic neuropathy and some biochemical markers or nerve conduction tests, however, the results shown have not been conclusive. This is why a double-blind, randomized controlled clinical trial is proposed, with the objective of evaluating the effect of cocoa supplementation in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and peripheral and autonomic diabetic neuropathy on a) the biochemical profile, which includes the evaluation of the glycemic and lipid profile, quantification of pro-inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress markers; b) the clinical profile through the application of standardized questionnaires, anthropometric measurements and blood pressure, and c) somatosensory processing through the paired pulse H reflex test. The hypothesis of this study is that cocoa supplementation will have a beneficial effect on the biochemical and clinical profile and somatosensory processing of peripheral and autonomic diabetic neuropathy.
NCT03594344
This study evaluates the effect of additional hyperbaric oxygen therapy after lower extremity amputation. The patients will be randomized after amputation to either a treatment group receiving hyperbaric oxygen therapy, or control group.
NCT05683106
The present study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the use of customized silicone digital orthoses for six months in the distribution of plantar pressure, in the reduction of pre-ulcerative lesions and plantar ulcers in the forefoot, foot deformities, quality of life and foot health and functionality in people with diabetes and neuropathy with risk category 2 and 3 for ulcers, according to the International Working Group on Diabetic Foot.
NCT06846567
A Phase I Clinical Study Evaluating the Safety, Pharmacokinetics, Food Effect, Single-Dose Proportionality, and Multiple-Dose Pharmacokinetic Comparison with Melogabalin Besilate Tablets after Single and Multiple Oral Administrations of BM2216 Extended-Release Tablets in Healthy Adult Subjects. To evaluate the pharmacokinetic characteristics of BM2216 Extended-Release Tablets in healthy adult subjects under fasting and postprandial conditions, and to assess the impact of food; to evaluate the dose proportionality following a single administration.To compare the single and multiple dose pharmacokinetic characteristics of BM2216 Extended-Release Tablets with those of Melogabalin Besilate Tablets, and to determine the relative bioavailability.To assess the safety of BM2216 Extended-Release Tablets in healthy adult subjects following single and multiple oral administrations.
NCT02790931
The main objective of this trial is to investigate the effects of foot muscle strengthening in daily activity of patients with diabetic neuropathy.
NCT04813133
This study aims to determine the role of Synchronized Lifestyle modification program along with Physiotherapy on the symptoms of DPN in patients on insulin therapy.
NCT06670430
This study will be carried out on 60 patients both gender male and female with diabetic neuropathy with age55-65 years. The patients will be selected from Elmahmoudia hospital .patients will be randomly assigned to two groups.
NCT06155487
Preliminary evaluate of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety and tolerability after oral administration of AJH-2947 in healthy Korean or Caucasian male subjects
NCT06603792
We will conduct a high-quality, blinded, randomized controlled trial (RCT) to rigorously test the effectiveness of EEG-based NF in patients with diabetes-related neuropathic pain in: 1) reducing pain intensity and pain affect, and 2) improving daily functioning and QoL.
NCT04008745
The main objective of this trial is to investigate the effect of an educational booklet foot-related exercise in diabetic neuropathy status, functional outcomes and gait biomechanics in people with diabetic neuropathy.
NCT06573684
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn the differences severity level of diabetic neuropathy based on electromyelography in type II diabetic patient with and without comorbidities. The main questions of this study: 1. What is the electromyography result in type II diabetic patient who: has no comorbidities, with hypertension, with hypertension and dyslipidemia? 2. Is there any differences in electromyography result in type II diabetic patient who: has no comorbidities, with hypertension, with hypertension and dyslipidemia? 3. Is there any association between distal latency with nerve conduction velocity in type II diabetic patient with and without comorbidities? 4. Is there any association between distal latency with amplitude in type II diabetic patient with and without comorbidities? 5. Is there any differences on diabetic neuropathy severity based on age, height, and A1C levels in type II diabetic patient with and without comorbidities? Researchers will collect information based on hospital registry as secondary data of in type II diabetic patient with and without comorbidities. The data consist of demographic data, clinical presentation, laboratory, and electromyography were collected from hospital registry by reviewing medical record. Then, the data was analyzed by using IBM SPSS Statistics v26.
NCT06482827
The aim of this study is to determine whether a 4-week treatment of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) can alleviate the symptoms of neuropathy in individuals with diabetic neuropathy. The study will involve using questionnaires, nerve assessments, sensory tests, blood flow measurements, and blood tests to monitor any changes in symptoms after the rTMS intervention.