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Active clinical trials for "Failure to Thrive"

Results 21-30 of 69

Clinical Study With an Enteral Formula With Symbiotic and DHA for Malnourished Children

Cystic FibrosisFailure to Thrive1 more

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a nutritional supplement is effective in the treatment of malnutrition in pediatric patients with failure to thrive or cystic fibrosis.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Tolerance of Infants With Cow's Milk Protein Allergy to Extensively Hydrolyzed Rice Protein or Casein...

Cow Milk Protein SensitivityTolerance1 more

The objective of this double blinded randomized study is to assess the tolerance of two extensively protein hydrolyzed infant formulas, one based on rice protein and the other one on casein, at introduction, and after 3 months of consumption, and their efficacy on growth and on the reduction of allergy symptoms through a 3 months consumption period.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Women First: Preconception Maternal Nutrition

Maternal MalnutritionGrowth Failure3 more

Multi-country three-arm, individually randomized, non-masked, controlled trial to ascertain the benefits of ensuring optimal maternal nutrition before conception and providing an evidence base for programmatic priority directed to minimizing the risk of malnutrition in all females of reproductive age.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Somatropin Treatment in Patients With SHOX Deficiency and Turner Syndrome

Failure to Thrive

This clinical trial will compare the mean first year height velocity of somatropin-treated prepubertal patients with SHOX deficiency with the height velocity of a control group of untreated prepubertal patients with SHOX deficiency. Both groups will be compared to a somatropin-treated group of girls with Turner syndrome. After the second year patients in the control group have the option to receive treatment as well. All patients will optionally be treated until they achieved adult height.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

A Cohort Study of the Intestinal Microbiota of Premature Infants

Necrotizing EnterocolitisBronchopulmonary Dysplasia1 more

Premature infants are at risk for a variety of diseases, the investigators would like to learn more about why some premature babies are at higher risk and some are protected from these diseases. Scientists at UC Davis and other universities have developed new ways to measure the bacteria and a large number of small molecules in specimens of infant blood, urine, stomach fluid and poop and in mother's milk. These discoveries allow us to consider questions that were impossible to answer before these new techniques were developed. One such question is whether the bacteria in the poop of a premature baby can help us predict the baby's risk for developing infection or a common and serious disease of premature infants called necrotizing enterocolitis. A second question is whether the DNA of a premature baby (obtained from saliva with a q-tip) can predict higher risk for diseases of premature babies.

Active2 enrollment criteria

Is There a Microbiome Associated With Poor Growth in Preterm Infants?

Growth DisordersGrowth Failure1 more

This study evaluates the relationship between growth and stool microbiota in premature infants.

Active2 enrollment criteria

Intestinal Function in Neonates With Complex Congenital Heart Disease

Congenital Heart DefectsGrowth Failure

Postnatal intestinal function in cardiac infants. The overall goal of this proposal is to address a widespread health problem in the pediatric cardiac infant population - poor postnatal growth - through a collaborative effort between pediatric cardiology, cardiothoracic surgery, neonatology, microbiology, and immunology. The hypothesis is that term neonates with complex congenital heart disease (CHD) who receive trophic breastmilk feeds in the pre-operative period will show improved gut function than neonates who were strictly NPO (nothing by mouth) in the pre-operative period.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

The PREWEAN Study. Weaning of Preterm Infants During the First Year of Life.

Growth FailureAtopy3 more

In this Austrian observational study preterm infants born with a birth weight <1500 g and a gestational age <32 weeks will be investigated at the neonatal outpatient clinic. Infants will be stratified according their feeding regimen (breast, formula and combined feeding) and their introduction of solid foods (early complementary feeding group: <17th week of life corrected for prematurity, late complementary feeding group: ≥17th week of life corrected for prematurity). Nutrient intakes and anthropometric parameters will be assessed at term, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 6 months, 9 months and 12 months - all corrected for prematurity and with 40, 54 and 66 months.

Active6 enrollment criteria

Prophylactic Probiotics to Extremely Low Birth Weight Prematures

Feeding; DifficultNewborn3 more

Mortality and incidence of severe complications is still high among extremely premature infants. Common causes of severe complications in this population are poor nutrition, necrotizing enterocolitis, and severe infections. Feeding intolerance is also a common problem resulting in prolonged need for intravenous lines and poor nutrition. The aim of the study is to evaluate whether supplementation with the probiotic bacterium Lactobacillus reuteri DSM 17938 daily to premature infants with extremely low birth weight increases feeding tolerance to breast milk and thereby improves nutrition, increases growth and reduces serious complications and mortality in this population. Beyond this, possible mechanisms underlying these effects will be analyzed in stool, breast milk and blood samples.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Nutritional Impact of Moringa Oleifera Leaf Supplementation in Mothers and Children

MalnutritionWasting1 more

Studies to date on the effects of Moringa oleifera in diabetes and anemia and animal studies that examine the utility of moringa for increased milk and litter yield are of small scale, however high-quality large-scale placebo or case-controlled clinical trials to define the impact on infants of moringa leaf powder consumption by breastfeeding mothers are lacking. Moringa has a traditional and agricultural history of use as a galactagogue; despite this and its incorporation into products such as Mother's Milk Tea© and placement on NIH LactMed Lactation Database, this property has not been studied in large clinical trials nor in populations dependent on breastmilk such as in Kisumu, Kenya. This study will improve and add to existing knowledge of moringa's effect on human breastmilk and will provide novel information on the effect of moringa supplementation to lactating mothers on their infant's intestinal inflammation and health. After trial registration, the study was modified to include infant follow up to 18 months for some measures and the children's groups were removed. Further understanding of the acceptability of moringa leaf in a staple food of porridge and more the effect of moringa supplementation on infant and childhood growth, nutrition, and intestinal and systemic inflammation may translate in the future to the cultivation of moringa at the community or household level as an effective resource for the improvement of childhood undernutrition.

Completed8 enrollment criteria
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