View clinical trials related to Pregnancy Complications.
Filter by:This randomized control trial will evaluate whether a physical activity intervention can improve mental health and biologic markers of stress in pregnant people with depressive or anxiety symptoms. The study will enroll participants if they are presenting for prenatal care at Stanford Children's Health Obstetrics Clinic with a singleton gestation.
Pregnancy-related death is a growing public health issues, which are of particular concern to minority groups, including African-Americans and Spanish-speaking Latinas. Our proposal aims to improve a patient's ability to detect warning signs of pregnancy related death and seek medical care.
This is Observational study, aiming to investigate the potentiality of cffDNA and cfRNA by a non-invasive test, in combination with clinical characteristics, to establish models for early screening and predicting high-risk pregnancy of PE, SPB, and GDM in Vietnam.
Eating a Mediterranean-style diet during pregnancy improves pregnancy outcomes, yet most Americans who are pregnant do not follow this type of dietary pattern. There is increasing interest in Food is Medicine programs, which provides foods to patients to improve health outcomes - food provided in this context is called medically tailored meals. The research team at the UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention is developing a Food is Medicine program to improve pregnancy outcomes and at this point the team is ready to test the program. The purpose of this study is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of a Food is Medicine intervention when started during the first trimester of pregnancy. The eating pattern to be evaluated in this study is a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern adapted for the southern United States - thus, the program is called "Med-South." All who take part will receive Med-South dietary counseling. In addition, to help participants follow a Med-style dietary pattern, one group of study participants will receive extra virgin olive oil and nuts. The other group will receive extra virgin olive oil, nuts, and frozen meals (medically tailored meals) that align with the Med-South dietary pattern. Participants will be assigned at random (like flipping a coin) to one of these groups
This study hopes identify the main pruritogens of ICP pruritus and provide new insights for the diagnosis, prediction, and treatment of ICP. Details are as follows: It is planned to include ICP confirmed pregnant women and healthy pregnant women who have given birth in the Peking University Third Hospital and Sichuan University West China Second University Hospital. Then progesterone sulfate levels in plasma samples will be quantified by High Performance Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (HPLC-MS) and itch intensity will be quantified by questionnaires. Main study endpoint: To reveal new indicators of ICP diagnosis with high accuracy: single, multiple or combined indicators of progesterone sulfates and other molecules like bile acids; Secondary study endpoint: To determine whether progesterone sulfates can be used as an early screening indicator for ICP for disease prediction, specifically whether elevated levels of progesterone sulfates predate pruritus in pregnant women with ICP.
Cervical ripening is a medical treatment that can cause physical or emotional discomfort in pregnant women and is not without risks. This is a pilot study to assess feasibility and calculate the number of participants necessary for a complete clinical trial. The aim is to evaluate whether acupuncture can reduce the need for treatment (cervical ripening) in pregnant women at low or intermediate risk. Participants will be divided into two groups: one group will receive acupuncture, and the other will receive a simulated treatment of acupuncture.
The goal of this observational study is to compare a new artificial intelligence (AI) feedback tool with the traditional method for estimating fetal weight during ultrasound scans on pregnant women between 24-42 weeks of gestation. The study aims to investigate the presence of demographic bias in the AI model. The demographic factors examined in the study include Body Mass Index (BMI), the number of births, fetal age, mother's age, fetal sex, and the presence of preeclampsia. Moreover, the study will compare the accuracy of the AI model and the Hadlock model, a fetal growth formula, in estimating fetal weight. Participants will have their ultrasound scans pseudonymized and securely stored on password-protected removable drives, ensuring their identity and privacy are maintained. Afterward, the ultrasound data will be sent to the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), where the AI model will analyze the images to estimate fetal weight.
In this research study, the investigators want to learn more about the safety and effectiveness of a fetal surgery, known as fetoscopic laser photocoagulation (FLP), for the treatment of a pregnancy condition called vasa previa (VP). Vasa previa is a pregnancy complication that happens when blood vessels from the fetus grow over the entrance to the womb. In a VP pregnancy, natural vaginal birth is deadly for the baby in more than half of cases due to the bursting of VP vessels and severe blood loss. Currently, VP patients are recommended to be closely monitored and often hospitalized once they reach the third trimester of pregnancy. An early delivery by C-section would typically be performed in order to avoid breaking the exposed fetal vessels. Fetoscopic laser photocoagulation is a minimally invasive surgery in the womb to remove or correct abnormal blood vessels and tissues. In the FLP procedure, the surgeon uses a fetoscope (a tiny telescope) and a laser device to seal off unprotected vessels. While this surgery has been used to treat other pregnancy conditions, it has not yet been proven to be safe and/or effective for the treatment of vasa previa. This treatment aims to eliminate the VP, and, if successful, may have the potential to minimize the risk of bleeding, thereby enabling patients to avoid long hospitalization before delivery. This procedure may enable VP patients to have a vaginal delivery instead of C-section.
The objective of this research project is to conduct a single-site pilot trial to assess the feasibility and effect of low-dose aspirin to augment vascular recovery in the immediate postpartum period after preeclampsia through two specific aims: 1) to pilot test the feasibility of conducting a randomized controlled trial of postpartum low dose aspirin vs. placebo, and 2) to assess the effect of postpartum aspirin on endothelial function and blood pressure. Our central hypothesis is that postpartum administration of low-dose aspirin following preeclampsia will be feasible, improve endothelial function, and lower BP at 6 months postpartum. Subjects will undergo 3 study visits involving BP measurements, blood draws, questionnaires, and/or microiontophoresis. Up to 60 adult subjects will be enrolled at Magee-Women's Hospital.
The goal of this observational study is to learn more about the effect of obstetric epidural anesthesia on regional lung ventilation in healthy parturient women. The main question it aims to answer is whether the initiation or epidural analgesia improves or not regional lung ventilation in healthy women at term during labor. Participants will be subject to measurements of pulmonary impedance by electric impedance tomography before and after the start of epidural analgesia. No change will be applied to clinical care as a result of this measurement.