Flaxseed Supplementation in Prediabetic Adults (LINAPRED)
96 patients around the world
Available in Mexico
Prediabetes is a condition that increases the risk of T2DM and other diseases, its prevalence
increases year after year despite being a reversible condition through lifestyle changes,
diet, and medication. Therefore, it is important to find new strategies that, together with
the known treatments, help to improve glycemic control in people with prediabetes and thus
their risk of developing TDM2. Among these strategies may be the consumption of flaxseed, one
of the main sources of alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), an omega-3 fatty acid, lignans, and fiber.
This open-label randomized clinical trial will include, prior informed consent, 96 men and
women with prediabetes, subjects will be allocated in two groups, the intervention group or
the control group. The intervention group will receive 30 g per day of ground flaxseed
dissolved in water, (15 g in the morning and 15 g in the night), they will also be provided
with a dietary plan. The Control group will not receive any supplementation, only a dietary
plan controlled in alpha-linolenic acid.
The intervention will last 12 weeks; during this time, all patients will be scheduled every 2
weeks for follow-up visits. During the follow-up visits, subjects will be evaluated for
changes in gastrointestinal symptoms, and adherence to supplementation, which will be
assessed by a daily record, and the return of empty or unopened bags of flaxseed.
Every month, all subjects will undergo anthropometric, clinical, dietary, and biochemical
evaluations that include measurements of body weight, body composition, waist, and hip
circumferences, blood pressure, physical activity, quality of food intake, dietary intake,
fasting plasma glucose, hemoglobin A1C, insulin, LDL-C, HDL-C, triglycerides, and total
cholesterol; an oral glucose tolerance test will be performed at baseline and the end of the
study to each subject.
At the end of the study, the obtained information will be shared with the scientific
community to provide a possible food-based strategy for prediabetic adults in addition to the
already known prediabetes treatment. All participants of the study will be beneficiated with
free nutritional, anthropometric, and biochemical assessments.
Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud, Mexico