Diabetic neuropathy
68 results
1 - 68Duloxetine decreases pain of diabetic neuropathy
Treatments for diabetic neuropathy vary in benefit
Cannabis product ineffective for diabetic peripheral neuropathy
High-frequency spinal cord stimulation improves pain in patients with refractory painful diabetic neuropathy
Amitriptyline, duloxetine, and pregabalin each effective in decreasing pain from diabetic peripheral neuropathy; combinations even better
Anticonvulsants, SNRIs, and rubefacients are best initial choices for chronic pain caused by diabetic neuropathy or postherpetic neuralgia
TCA, capsaicin, older anticonvulsants best for neuropathy
TENS ineffective in chronic low back pain
Vitamin E = placebo for relief of neuropathic symptoms in patients with diabetes (VENUS)
Gabapentin + nortriptyline may be better than either for neuropathic pain
Semaglutide is associated with an increased risk of optic neuropathy
Lifestyle changes do not affect outcomes in patients with pre-diabetes or diabetes
Daily chlorhexidine wipes and soap-and-water wipes are equally effective for preventing diabetic foot ulcers
AAN guideline on managing painful diabetic polyneuropathy
Tight glycemic control ineffective in decreasing microvascular complications in T2DM (ACCORD)
Acupuncture ineffective for hot flashes
Herbal combination might be effective for nonpulsatile tinnitus
In older adults with type 2 diabetes, GLP-1 agonists decrease major adverse cardiovascular events; SGLT2 inhibitors prevent heart failure hospitalizations
Gabapentin and pregabalin not effective for low back pain with or without radiculopathy
Liraglutide probably the best second drug to prevent cardiovascular events in patients with T2DM who take metformin