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Active clinical trials for "Growth Disorders"

Results 51-60 of 145

Effect of a Complementary Food Supplement on Growth and Morbidity of Ghanaian Infants

Growth DisordersInfant Malnutrition3 more

Prevention of malnutrition in infants and children requires access and intake of nutritious food starting at birth with exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life, breastfeeding in combination with complementary foods from 6-24 months of age, access to clean drinking water and sanitation, access to preventive and curative health care (including prenatal). In Ghana, the Demographic and Health Survey of 2014 reports rates of stunting, wasting and underweight in children aged 0-59 months are 28%, 14% and 9% respectively. Furthermore, height for age starts dropping from age 4-6 months with children aged 6-23 months being more likely to be stunted (40%) than those below 6 months (4%). Infant and young child feeding data show that for breast-fed children ranging from 6 months through 35 months of age, cereals are predominantly the first foods introduced in the diet (6-8 months of age). As the child grows older, consumption of fruits rich in Vitamin A, other fruits and vegetables and meat, fish, poultry and eggs are reported by the mothers. The Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) found that the proportion of breast fed children aged 6-23 months who received a recommended variety of foods the minimum number of times per day increases with child's age from 28% in children 6-8 months to 50% in children aged 18-23 months. The study objective is to examine the effect of providing a macro- and micro-nutrient fortified complementary food supplement (KokoPlusTM) on growth and nutritional status of Ghanaian infants.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Bovine Colostrum/ Egg Supplementation in Young Malawian Children

StuntingEnvironmental Enteric Dysfunction

The trial will consist of adding either a supplement of 4.3g egg powder + 5.7g bovine colostrum or a control flour along with a multiple micronutrient powder to the diets of healthy Malawian children 9 months of age. This supplement provides additional essential amino acids, choline and immunoactive colostrum. Children will be receive either the supplement or control for 12 weeks. Children will have regular follow-up where anthropometry is measured. At enrollment and after 12 weeks, stool will be collected and a urinary lactulose permeability test conducted. Children will be measured at enrollment and at weeks 2, 4, 8, 12, 20, 32 after enrollment.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Evidence Generation Related to Stunting Prevention in Balochistan

StuntingLow Birth Weight1 more

The World Food Programme (WFP) has signed MoU with Planning and Development Department of Balochistan in collaboration with Nutrition Cell and National Programme for Family Planning and Primary Health Care, Balochistan for the prevention of stunting. The project will utilize the window of opportunity (1000 days from conception to 2 years) for addressing stunting in children under-two years. Therefore project will recruit pregnant women during first trimester and newborns who delivered from recruited pregnant women will be followed until the age of 2 years. Children 6-12 months of age will be enrolled and followed until the age of two years. The interventions included nutritional supplements during pregnancy, lactation and for children during 6-24 months of age. The project will be implemented in Lady Health Workers (LHWs) covered areas of districts Pishin and Quetta, Balochistan.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Zinc-MNP Trial for Prevention of Diarrhea and Promotion of Linear Growth

DiarrheaStunting

This is a randomized, double-blind, community-based efficacy trial of different doses, forms, and frequencies of zinc supplementation for the prevention of diarrhea and promotion of linear growth among children 9-11 months of age in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Maternal Dadiah Supplementation During Pregnancy on Child Growth and Gastrointestinal...

Gastrointestinal MicrobiomeImmunoglobulin A2 more

The aim of our study is to assess the effect of giving dadiah as a supplement to pregnant women on improving the growth and digestive health of children.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Evaluating Bundling of Nutrition-specific Interventions

Stunting in Under-2 Children

Background: Burden: The prevalence of stunting among the under-five children in Bangladesh was >55% in 1997, which reduced to 41.9% in 2011. This reduction took 14 years to achieve with existing interventions, and till today Bangladesh remains among the countries with the highest stunting prevalence. Knowledge gap: In the Lancet series on Maternal and Child Nutrition, Bhutta et al (2013) modelled the effect of 10 direct interventions on lives saved and economic costs in 34 countries which contains 90% of the children with stunted growth. Their findings suggested that at 90% coverage, these interventions could cut down under-5 year mortality by 15% and avert one-fifth of stunting. The total additional annual cost was estimated at $9.6 billion. There is a dearth of primary research, however, to determine a feasible, effective bundle of interventions for developing countries. Relevance: This study will review and test different sets of nutrition-specific intervention bundles in a cohort of pregnant women and the subsequent impact on the length-for-age Z score (LAZ) of their offspring from that pregnancy. Hypothesis: Five selected nutrition-specific interventions implemented during early pregnancy and during first two years of child's life in different bundles will cause a shift of 0.4 in mean LAZ score among children at 24 months of age compared to those in comparison arm. Methods: The investigators propose a community-based randomized trial (cRCT) to evaluate the effectiveness of different combinations of the five selected nutrition-specific interventions and identify the best combination for improving childhood LAZ. Selected interventions include prenatal nutrient supplementation; intensive counselling on prenatal nutrition, exclusive breastfeeding and timely complementary feeding; and nutrient supplementation during 6-23 months of child's age. The proposed study area is Habiganj district, Sylhet division. 125 clusters (each ~2000 population or ~450 households) will be selected from 12 homogeneous unions in 2 adjacent sub-districts. The clusters will then be randomly assigned to any one of the 5 study arms. Data would be collected at baseline and followed up, including on nutritional intake and anthropometric measurements of mothers and offspring. Primary outcome measure/variable would be mean LAZ of offspring at 24 months. Secondary outcome variables include nutritional intake during pregnancy, maternal weight gain, exclusive breast feeding up-to 6 months, and birth weight. Implications: The investigators expect that the results will serve to inform and shape future health policy decisions related to promotion of maternal and child health.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Controlled Trial to Test the Efficacy of Lipid-based Nutrient Supplements to Prevent Severe Stunting...

MalnutritionStunting1 more

This study tests the hypothesis that infants receiving milk-powder containing fortified spread (lipid-based nutrient supplement) as a complementary food for one year have lower incidence of severe stunting (poor length gain) than infants who are provided with no extra food supplements or maize-soy flour for complementary porridge.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Milk and Meat on IGFs in Prepubertal Boys

Growth DisordersMetabolic Syndrome

The objective of the study is to examine whether a 7-day high protein intake from either milk or meat in healthy, prepubertal children can increase fasting levels of serum IGF-I, IGFBP-3 and IGF-I/IGFBP-3 as well as insulin, glucose and HOMA insulin reststance, HOMA beta cell function and amino acids.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Improving Early Childhood Development in Zambia

StuntingChild Development

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of a community-based early childhood development (ECD) program on children's physical and cognitive development. Under the program, targeted communities will be assigned a trained Child Development Agent (CDA) who will have four main tasks and responsibilities: 1) biweekly screening and management (including referral) of acute malnutrition in children; 2) encouragement of caregivers to utilize routine care services for children; 3) screening for symptoms of acute diseases including malaria, diarrhea, and pneumonia and referral for diagnosis and treatment; and 4) organization and mentoring of biweekly caregiver meetings to discuss parenting and promote early childhood cognitive stimulation. The investigators will enroll at baseline around 600 children ages 6 - 12 months and their caregivers, and randomize them at the community-level to receive the ECD program or to remain in the control group. The study period will be one year. At end line, the investigators will collect important indicators of child physical and cognitive development to assess program impact. If the program shows both feasibility and impact, there is the potential to integrate program interventions into existing national community-based health initiatives. Amendment: the study period has been extended for a second year. After a five month gap when no intervention was provided, biweekly (i.e., fortnightly) community-based parenting groups were restarted in intervention clusters. In the second year of the intervention, CDAs no longer visit households.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Bioequivalence of Two Products (Norditropin® Versus Nutropin AQ®) in Healthy Adult Volunteers

Growth DisorderHealthy

This trial is conducted in Europe and United States of America (USA). The aim of this trial is to examine the bioequivalence (assessment of the expected biological equivalence of two pharmaceutical drug products with identical active ingredient) of Norditropin® versus Nutropin AQ® in healthy adult volunteers.

Withdrawn11 enrollment criteria
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