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Nutritional Deficiency clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05271838 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Protein and Magnesium in Ulcerative Colitis

PAMUC
Start date: February 8, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to improve the quality of nutritional therapy for patients admitted with Acute Severe Ulcerative Colitis (ASUC) treated with high-dose steroids. This study consists of two randomized interventions and one observational part regarding protein, magnesium, and metabolic stress. First an interventional part aims to explore the effect of a high-protein diet during and after admission on different parameters regarding protein turnover.Second the study aims to explore the degree of magnesium depletion in ASUC. In case of magnesium depletion, the study aims to investigate whether oral magnesium supplementation can regain body stores of magnesium. Last the study aims to observe the degree of metabolic stress, including, the degree of insulin resistance, in ASUC during admission and under treatment with high-dose steroids compared to three weeks after discharge.

NCT ID: NCT04958447 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Nutritional Deficiency

Nutritional Management in Respiratory Critically Ill Patients -an Observational Study in Mainland China

NM-in-RCIP
Start date: July 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The important role of nutritional management in the treatment of ICU patients has been paid more and more attention. Reasonable nutritional management can improve the nutritional status of patients, reduce the risk of malnutrition, shorten the length of ICU stay, improve the quality of life of patients, and reduce the mortality of patients, thereby improving the prognosis. Many studies have investigated the nutritional status and implementation of ICU patients. It is generally believed that the nutritional status of ICU patients is not good, and the implementation of standardization needs to be improved.The data on the nutritional status and implementation of RICU patients in mainland China is rare. Therefore, the main purpose of this study is to investigate the implementation and compliance of nutritional support treatment for RICU patients in mainland China.

NCT ID: NCT04190121 Recruiting - Esophageal Cancer Clinical Trials

Perioperative Nutritional Support in Esophageal Cancer Patients

NEEC
Start date: March 26, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Upper GI malignancies often lead to involuntary weight loss and nutritional deficits. Nutritional support, both pre- and postoperatively, may improve post-operative course and reduce length of hospital stay. This prospective randomized trial aims to investigate the above mentioned hypothesis and clarify any variants that may differ between the investigation and control group at a statistically significant level.

NCT ID: NCT04116593 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Nutritional Deficiency

School-Based Nutrition Education in Improving Dietary Diversity Among Adolescent Girls

Start date: January 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators hypothesize that school-based nutrition education will increase dietary diversity among the adolescent girls. The investigators propose a matched, pair-cluster randomized controlled trial to measure the efficacy of school-based nutrition education on dietary diversity of the adolescent girls in Bangladesh. This study will have two arms (one intervention and one control arm). After screening, based on exclusion criteria, the investigators will prepare two separate lists (one for urban and one for rural) of schools in Rangpur district. From each list, clusters (schools) will be paired based on monthly tuition fees provided by the students (as a proxy indicator of socio-economic status of the students) and infrastructure of the schools. The investigators will randomly select one pair from each list and within each pair one school will be assigned to intervention arm and another one will be assigned to control arm through randomization. Targeting an effect size of 20 percentage point reduction of inadequate dietary diversity, a minimum of 148 adolescent girls will be required for each arm. Eleven to fifteen years old adolescent girls studying in grade six, seven and eight will be recruited from each school. To ensure household level participation and support, caregivers will be invited to the school for a discussion at the beginning of the intervention. Nutritional education will be delivered using audio-visual techniques (audio-visual presentation) once in a week for each class, for 3 months. Individual (IDDS) and household dietary diversity scores (HDDS) will be used for measuring dietary diversity at individual and household level, respectively. IDDS and HDDS data will be collected at recruitment, at the end of education intervention and again after 3 months of the completion of intervention. Following national guidelines, weekly iron-folic acid (IFA) supplementation will be provided to both intervention and control arm for 3 months. For identifying the barriers to and facilitators of intake of diversified food, a qualitative research will be conducted after the intervention. Adolescent girls having improved and girls showing no improvement in individual dietary diversity score will be recruited purposively for the qualitative assessment.

NCT ID: NCT01342861 Recruiting - Malnutrition Clinical Trials

INAPEN Protocol for Impact of Breakfast Improvement

INAPEN
Start date: October 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hospital undernutrition is a common health problem [1]. As a countermeasure, French hospitals have created a system of cross-function committees for feeding and nutrition called CLANs [Comité de Liaison pour l'alimentation et la nutrition] [2]. Potential actions for improving patient nutritional status include improving the characteristics of the food provided to increase both protein and calorie intake in at-risk patients that do not require enteral or parenteral nutrition. Looking at the various daily meals, the investigators considered that breakfast following the night fast would be the easiest meal to improve . Condition Intervention Phase Patients scheduled for hospitalization of over 4 days Addition of protein (milky food in the breakfast) Current care

NCT ID: NCT00351338 Recruiting - Morbid Obesity Clinical Trials

Nutritional Deficiencies in the Bariatric Patients

Start date: July 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Although morbidly obese subjects have larger than regular caloric intake, there is evidence that they suffer from nutritional deficiencies at a higher rate than the general population, probably because they eat mostly "unhealthy food."