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Active clinical trials for "Enterocolitis, Necrotizing"

Results 11-20 of 169

WithHolding Enteral Feeds Around Blood Transfusion (International)

Necrotizing Enterocolitis

The WHEAT International trial is a comparative effectiveness trial exploring whether withholding enteral feeds around the time of blood transfusion in very premature infants (<30 weeks) will reduce the occurrence of Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC). Currently both continued feeding and withholding feeding are approved care practices. The current study will randomize infants from Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs) across Canada and the United Kingdom (UK) into one of the two care approaches (withholding or continued feeds) to determine if any significant outcomes are found.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

the Incidence of Necrotizing Enterocolitis in Preterm With Respiratory Distress Syndrome Undergoing...

Pharmacological Action of Drug

It is a randomized, prospective study; it will be carried out in the NICU at Alzahraa University Hospital including 50 newborn babies diagnosed with respiratory distress syndrome. The purpose of this study is to : Investigate the protective caffeine on necrotizing enterocolitis in respiratory distress syndrome preterm infants. Detect the impact of caffeine protocol treatment on the in-incidence of necrotizing enterocolitis in respiratory distress syndrome preterm infants in neonatal intensive care 1- Control group It includes preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome aged 32 weeks-35 weeks. 2- Caffeine-treated group It includes preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome who received caffeine treatment as intravenous caffeinospire (Caffeine citrate) 60 mg / 3 ml (20 mg /ml) 3 ml vial for injection.

Active5 enrollment criteria

Spectral Analysis of Bowel Sounds in Preterm Babies of Less Than 32 Weeks of Amenorrhea (WA) as...

Bowel SoundsSpectral Analysis2 more

The recording or bowels is easy and cheap. The investigators wonder if these sounds are modified in babies with high risk of necrotizing enterocolitis. In this study, the investigators suggest to record and do a spectral analysis of 30 seconds of bowel sounds in preterm babies of less than 32WA before and after enteral nutrition, every day until the end of hospitalization. A spectral analysis will be made for each record to determine frequencies of the signal. The investigators will try to determine physiological frequencies and look for modifications in pathological situations.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

CEUS Evaluation of Bowel Perfusion in Necrotizing Enterocolitis

Necrotizing Enterocolitis of NewbornBowel Ischemic

There is no bedside imaging technique that can quantify dynamic bowel perfusion with high soft tissue contrast and sensitivity in necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). Our goal is to assess the feasibility of utilizing contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in bedside monitoring of bowel perfusion in NEC. Patients with suspected or diagnosed NEC will be recruited for the study. Following parental consent, the subject will undergo CEUS, performed separately from any clinically indicated conventional US, in the ICU. Subjects will be scanned with CEUS at two different time-points (at the time NEC is first suspected or diagnosed and at time of MRI scan). The CEUS scans will be interpreted by the sponsor-investigator. The study will be conducted at one site, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. It is expected that up to 100 subjects will be enrolled per year, for up to two years, for a total enrollment of up to 200 subjects.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Comparative Effectiveness Trial for Diagnosis of Necrotizing Enterocolitis

Necrotizing Enterocolitis

The overall objective of our study is to determine the clinical usefulness of BUS for NEC evaluation in diverse NICU settings.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Human Milk Fortification in Extremely Preterm Infants

Necrotizing EnterocolitisSepsis1 more

This is a randomised controlled multi-centre trial comparing the effect of diet supplementation of a human breast milk-based nutrient fortifier (H2MF®) with standard bovine protein-based nutrient fortifier in 222 extremely preterm infants (born before gestational week 28+0) exclusively fed with human breast milk (own mother´s milk and/or donor milk). The infants will be randomised to receive either the human breast-milk based H2MF® or the standard bovine protein-based nutrient fortifier when oral feeds have reached <100 ml/kg/day. The randomised intervention, stratified by centre, will continue until the target gestational week 34+0. The infant must not be fed with formula during the intervention period. The allocation will be concealed before inclusion, but after randomisation the study is not blinded. Primary endpoint of the intervention is the composite variable necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), sepsis and mortality. The enrolled infants are characterised with clinical data including growth, feeding intolerance, use of enteral and parenteral nutrition, treatment, antibiotics and complications collected daily in a study specific case report form from birth until discharge from the hospital (not longer than gestational week 44+0). A follow up focusing on neurological development, growth and feeding problems will be performed at 2 years of age (corrected) and 5.5 years of age.

Active11 enrollment criteria

Cohort of Premature Newborns for Charaterization of the Digestive Microbiota in Ulcerative Necrotizing...

Necrotizing EnterocolitisPremature Birth

Compare the bacterial digestive microbiota during the stay in neonatal intensive care between a group of premature newborns developing a NEC (necrotizing enterocolitis) and a group of newborns free from NEC.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

RIC-NEC Randomized Controlled Trial

Necrotizing Enterocolitis

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a serious intestinal disease of preterm and term neonates which remains a major cause of intestinal failure, and an unsolved clinical challenge in pediatrics. While overall mortality of preterm infants continues to decrease due to improvements in general neonatal care, mortality caused by NEC remains high (up to 30-50%) and survivors suffer from reduced quality of life, and long-term disabilities such as debilitating complications of intestinal failure, poor growth and neurodevelopmental delay. Besides prevention, there have been hardly any innovations in the treatment of NEC which underwent trial evaluation. NEC pathogenesis is multifactorial, but bowel ischemia is known to play an essential role in the development of NEC. Remote ischemic conditioning (RIC) is a therapeutic maneuver that involves brief cycles of non-lethal ischemia and reperfusion applied to a limb, which protects distant organs (such as the intestine) from ischemic damage. The investigators have shown that in preclinical models of NEC, RIC effectively reduces intestinal damage and prolongs survival. The investigators have also demonstrated the safety of RIC in preterm neonates with NEC. Before the investigators can evaluate the effectiveness of RIC in treating neonates with NEC in a Phase III randomized clinical trial (RCT), a Phase II Feasibility RCT must be conducted to evaluate issues related to the enrollment and randomization of neonates, masking of the RIC intervention, and measurement of clinical outcomes. The investigators hypothesize that it is feasible to conduct a multicenter RCT to evaluate RIC during the management of neonates with medical NEC.

Not yet recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Role of Urinary Claudin-2, Caveolin-1, and EGF as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Necrotizing Enterocolitis...

EnterocolitisNecrotizing2 more

Our study aims to determine the differences in the concentration of urinary claudin-2, caveolin-1, and epidermal growth factor (EGF) as non-invasive biomarkers in the diagnosis of Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC). We compare the concentration of urinary claudin-2, caveolin-1, and EGF between preterm neonates at risk of NEC and healthy term infants as the basis for determining NEC biomarkers with the most optimum sensitivity and specificity. This analytical observational study is based on biomolecular profiling with a prospective cohort design approach. The research subjects are a group of preterm neonates (gestational age of 28-34 weeks) who were admitted in Perinatology Unit, Department of Pediatrics, Saiful Anwar General Hospital, Malang and whom diagnosed with NEC using Bell's criteria and serum TGF-β levels. Subjects are selected by consecutive sampling and single-blind analysis was performed in the Laboratory of Bioscience and Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Brawijaya. During the research process, groups of preterm and term neonates would be observed and their clinical development followed. The collection of biologic samples would be taking 10 cc of urine and 40 mg of feces on day-5 (D5) and 7 (D7). The consecutive manner of urinary sampling was regarded to assess whether there was a time-related protein expression in the course of the NEC process. Faecal samples would be assessed for microbiota profile analysis described by the ratio of Proteobacteria: Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes to represent dysbiosis process in NEC. After 7 days, the subjects would be grouped into a group of preterm neonates with NEC, a group of healthy term neonates as a control, while a group of preterm infants at whom during the course of the study did not develop NEC, would be assigned to group of premature neonates without NEC. Urinary protein concentrations from the three groups would then be analyzed and adjusted with normalized creatinine, so that the levels of these three proteins could be assessed quantitatively using the ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay) method. The results would be compared with the microbiota profile as the golden standard for NEC cases. Through statistical tests, sensitivity, specificity and cut-off of selected protein levels would be assessed as diagnostic biomarkers of NEC.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Markers of Platelet Activation foR Identification of Late Onset Sepsis in Preterm Infants

Late-Onset Neonatal SepsisNecrotising Enterocolitis1 more

The PARENT study will examine platelet and endothelial associated proteins in preterm infants being investigated for late onset sepsis (LOS) to see if infants with fulminant sepsis can be prospectively identified using these markers

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria
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