Clinical Trials Logo

Jaundice, Neonatal clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Jaundice, Neonatal.

Filter by:
  • Not yet recruiting  
  • « Prev · Page 2

NCT ID: NCT04527536 Not yet recruiting - Jaundice, Neonatal Clinical Trials

Research of Diagnostic Value for BMJ Infants

Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Breast milk jaundice (BMJ) is the main cause of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. Excessive serum unconjugated bilirubin level will not only cause the interruption or early termination of breastfeeding, but also cause kernicterus. Which can cause long-term dysfunction in infants. But for a long time, BMJ diagnosis has relied on clinical exclusive methods, lack of objective and reliable laboratory indicators. Which leads to misdiag. This project is a single-center, prospective nested case-control study. It is planned to establish a neonatal BMJ cohort. According to the admission criteria, 100 cases of early-onset BMJ and late-onset BMJ will be completed, and 100 healthy controls collected during the same period. , Compare the detection results of fecal miRNA and intestinal flora of the two groups of BMJ children and healthy controls, draw the ROC curve of the joint diagnosis, conduct research on the combined diagnostic value of fecal miRNA and intestinal flora analysis, and try to find the feasibility and practical value of diagnostic markers for feces in infants with BMJ.

NCT ID: NCT04445675 Not yet recruiting - Jaundice, Neonatal Clinical Trials

The Effect of Breastfeeding Support on Hospitalization Due to Jaundice

Breastfeeding
Start date: August 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Neonatal jaundice is the most common reason for rehospitalization after postnatal discharge. Jaundice due to breastfeeding failure is an important subtype of pathological neonatal jaundice. Typically, it occurs with lactation failure, which results in dehydration (reducing urine output), significant weight loss (>10% of birth weight) and sometimes hypernatremia, during the first postnatal week. Jaundice caused by breastfeeding failure is observed in one third (31.8%) of total cases of pathological neonatal jaundice requiring rehospitalization. Jaundice lasts for an average of 6.8 days and the length of hospital stay takes up to 3 days. Jaundice due to breastfeeding failure requires focused efforts for a program structured with breastfeeding education and special breastfeeding support. This support causes the role of nurses to become even more important. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of support provided for breastfeeding and the feeding of infants' with breast milk on hospitalization due to jaundice. Research Hypotheses: H0: The support provided for breastfeeding and the feeding of infants' with breast milk has no effect on hospitalization due to jaundice. H1: The support provided for breastfeeding and the feeding of infants' with breast milk affects the consequences of hospitalization due to jaundice.