Finger Food, Pleasure at Your Fingertips: Randomized Pilot Study, Open-label and Parallel Groups...
UndernutritionElderly PersonFood is available in easy-to-grip bites that allow residents in care settings to use their fingers for food. This new way of eating can help limit weight loss, increase food intake, gain independence and improve the enjoyment of eating for residents.
Maintaining Immune and Mitochondrial Functions in Old Adults With SAfe Nutrition.
MalnutritionSarcopeniaAging is associated with an increased inflammation named "inflammageing" and with an altered immune response. Different mechanisms have been proposed to explain the phenomenon of inflammageing and increased oxidative stress: deficiencies in essential amino acids, and some micronutrients have an important impact and may induce immune cell dysregulation. Mitochondrial dysfunction may explain the complex relationship between malnutrition sarcopenia, immune dysfunction and aging. Therefore, a personalized nutritional strategy aiming to improve mitochondrial function, decrease oxidative stress, down-regulate inflammation and restore immunity appears to be a logical approach in order to treat malnutrition and its biological and clinical consequences. MIMOSA will investigate the role of nutritional supplements in rescuing altered mitochondrial function and redox state imbalance.
BASUN - Risks for Malnutrition, Metabolic Bone Disease and Impaired Oral Health After Obesity Treatment...
ObesityMorbidWeight-reducing obesity surgery (OS) generally gives good results but complications are common; e.g. impaired weight loss, weight regain, bowel pain, diarrhea, vitamin/mineral deficiency, osteoporosis and impaired dental health. The BASUN study is a prospective 10-year comparison of 1000 surgically and 400 conventionally treated individuals regarding adverse side-effects, risk factors for complications and poor outcome.
Individualized Nutritional Care Bundle for Home Nursing Patients With Pressure Injuries.
Wounds and InjuriesMalnutrition3 moreObjective: To evaluate the impact of an individualized nutrition intervention package on pressure injury healing rates, prevention of new pressure injuries, complications, quality of life, and cost-effectiveness in adult on home nursing care with pressure injuries staged II and above in Singapore. Study Design: A two-group, non-blinded, randomized, pragmatic clinical trial with a cost-effectiveness analysis. Location/ Setting: Community Participants: Adults (aged 21 years and above) receiving home nursing care with at least one pressure injury (Stage II, III, IV, or Unstageable). 190 subjects per arm Intervention: The intervention group will receive an individualized nutrition intervention package consisting of individualized nutritional supplementation, specialized nutritional education pamphlets, regular dietetic support via home visits or telehealth, and home nursing care by nurses trained in nutrition care. The control group will receive specialized nutritional educational pamphlets, and home nursing care by nurses trained in nutrition care, with or without nutritional supplementation. Outcome Measures: Main outcomes of wound area reduction, and proportion of participants with >40% area reduction at 30 days, 60 days and 90 days. Secondary outcomes include proportion of participants and wounds with increasing severity of PI stages (e.g., stage II to stage III), improvement in Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) and nutritional status, and incidence of wound infections at 30 days, 60 days and 90 days, proportion of participants with complete healing, mortality and unplanned hospital admissions. Economic Evaluation: The primary economic outcome will be the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) per pressure injury prevented, with a time horizon of 1 year for intervention versus control during the period of intervention (3-months) and up to a year. Statistical Analyses: Individual patient level analysis will be performed as per our primary analysis, and we will also perform cluster level analysis. Hazard ratios (HR) will be determined using Cox proportional hazards models and their corresponding 95% Confidence Intervals (95%CI). Imbalances in individual level data will be accounted for using statistical adjustment in a Mixed-Effects Cox Regression model. Hypothesis: This study aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a individualized and protocolized nutrition intervention package for pressure injury management in home care patients. The findings could inform the development of evidence-based guidelines and recommendations for nutritional care and education in this vulnerable population, ultimately leading to improved patient outcomes and reduced healthcare costs associated with pressure injuries.
The UFIM (Ultraprocessed Foods In Breast Milk) Project
Child MalnutritionChild Allergy1 moreIn last decades, a change in dietary habits has been observed in industrialized countries characterized by a drastic increase in the consumption of ultra-processed foods (UPF, Ultra-Processed Foods). As defined by the NOVA classification, UPFs are industrial formulations of food substances added with colourings, flavourings, emulsifiers, thickeners and other additives. Among the main compounds of UPFs are the advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). Increasing evidence suggests an association between dietary exposure to AGEs and the development of chronic non-communicable diseases, such as obesity and allergies, in the general population, through increased oxidative stress and inflammation. Preliminary evidence suggests that a maternal diet rich in AGEs during pregnancy and lactation could negatively influence the composition of breast milk and have a negative impact on the infants health. However, data regarding the presence of derivatives of UPFs in breast milk are not available. The UFIM (Ultraprocessed Foods In Breast Milk) study aims at evaluate the presence of UPFs-derivatives compounds in breast milk.
Nutritional Intervention in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Acute Lymphoblastic LeukemiaChildhood Cancer2 moreIntroduction: Annually 400,000 children are diagnosed with cancer in the world. Approximately 90% live in low/middle-income countries, with survival rates of 10-30%. In Mexico, children and adolescents' hospital admissions for cancer are mainly leukemias (46%), being acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) the most common. Half of ALL patients have an altered nutritional status at the time of diagnosis. Nutritional assessment is performed using conventional anthropometric measures, which are not sensitive to changes in fat-free mass and fat mass (FFM and FFM). Our objective is to evaluate the effect of an individualized food-based nutritional intervention according to the nutritional status, body composition and comorbidities in pediatric patients with ALL. This is a pre-test/post-test clinical trial. Children 2-14 y olds diagnosed with ALL and in the remission stage (4-6 weeks post-diagnosis) will participate. The nutritional status will be evaluated using questionnaires and body composition. The intervention will be a 6 mo individualized food-based nutrition plan changing meal plans every 2 wk; every plan provides 5 interchangeable meals, adapting to personal preferences and symptoms related to antineoplastic treatment (nausea, diarrhea, taste alteration, etc.). For hospitalized patients, the options offered by the hospital will be evaluated and adapted to the nutritional intervention. Effectiveness of the intervention will be assessed using a paired test dependant on the distribution of the data.
TREAT Child Alcohol Use Disorder (C-AUD) in Eastern Uganda
Alcohol AbuseAlcohol Drinking9 moreThe investigators will investigate the existence of alcohol drinking among children living under adult supervision and care, living within the communities. The investigators will focus on the age group 6-13 years overlapping with the recommended age for primary school attendance. The project is approaching the research topic using quantitative and qualitative methods. The TREAT C-AUD research project will therefore document to which degree alcohol drinking is a problem among children in Mbale, Eastern Uganda.
Pancreatic Enzymes and Bile Acids in Acutely Ill Severely Malnourished Children
SEPSISMALNUTRITION1 moreChildren with severe malnutrition who are sick and admitted to hospitals have high mortality, usually because of infection. Malnourished children have more potentially harmful bacteria in their upper intestines than well-nourished children and this may contribute to inflammation in the gut and whole body. These bacteria may cross from the intestines to the bloodstream causing life-threatening infections. A related abnormality among malnourished children is reduction in the digestive enzymes made by the pancreas and the liver. Apart from helping with digestion of food, these enzymes are important in helping the body control bacteria in the upper intestines. It is therefore possible that treatment with digestive enzymes could help reduce the burden of harmful bacteria and thus lower inflammation and the risk of serious infection. One study conducted in Malawi has shown that children with severe malnutrition who were supplemented with pancreatic enzymes had a lower risk of dying. However, this was a small study and although promising, requires validation. No studies of supplementation with bile acids have been done among severely malnourished children. However, bile acids are commonly used to manage patients with liver function abnormalities, something that malnourished children suffer from as well. The investigators want to find out if supplementing these pancreatic enzymes and bile acids among ill children with severe acute malnutrition is safe and reduces the risk of death, deterioration or readmission to hospital.
Comparison of Nutritional Screening Tools in Liver Cirrhosis Patients
MalnutritionCirrhosis1 moreThis study compares two nutritional screening questionnaires in cirrhotic patients. All patients will be assessed with both questionnaires, besides a complete nutritional assessment.
Supplementing Maternal and Infant Diet With High-energy, Micronutrient Fortified Lipid-based Nutrient...
Infant MalnutritionMalnutrition in PregnancyThe use of lipid-based nutrients (LNS), such as Nutributter or fortified spread (FS), have been associated with improved growth and development outcomes among infants in Ghana and Malawi. Modified versions of such supplements have been developed to improve their nutrient density and quality and to lower their costs. Such modified products have proven acceptable to pregnant women in Malawi and Ghana. In the present trial, the investigators aim to test the effect of LNS on pregnancy and child outcomes, when given during pregnant and lactating women and their infants from 6 to 18 months of age. In control groups, participants will receive either iron+folate tables during pregnancy only or multiple micronutrient tablets during pregnancy and first six months of lactations. The main hypothesis to be tested suggests that the mean length-for-age Z-score (LAZ) of 18-month-old infants who received LNS between 6 and 18 months of age and whose mothers were provided with LNS during pregnancy and the first 6 months of lactation is higher than the mean LAZ score of same age infants who received no dietary supplements and whose mothers received iron-folate supplementation during pregnancy only. To detect the long-term effect of the LNS supplementation, we now propose to conduct a follow-up study when the children are 9 years old, to see if the intervention had effect on children's growth, cardiometabolic and respiratory status and neurocognitive development.