View clinical trials related to Healthy Infants.
Filter by:This is a randomized, controlled, double-blind, intervention trial of healthy male and female term infants to evaluate the efficacy of the 2 HMOs on beneficially modulating the gut microbiota, gut maturation, gut barrier integrity, immune response, and other developmental outcomes in healthy Chinese infants. The trial consists of 2 randomized formula-fed groups, and a non-randomized breastfed reference group.
This randomized, double-blind, controlled intervention trial aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a starter infant formula supplemented with an HMO blend and a probiotic, and will provide evidence on the safety and efficacy of the innovative prebiotic/ probiotic blend to support age-appropriate infant growth, a healthy gut microbiome, gastrointestinal (GI) tolerance and GI health, and immune development.
The aim of this randomized, controlled, multi-center, double-blind study of healthy term infants is to test the safety and efficacy of a new infant formula with a specific blend of six human milk oligosaccharides. The primary objective of the trial is to demonstrate the safety of the new infant formula supplemented by comparing the growth of infants randomized to the experimental formula versus the control formula from enrollment to the age of 4 months.
This is a randomized, controlled, multicenter, double-blind study of healthy term infants. The primary objective of the trial is to demonstrate the safety of a a starter infant formula supplemented with pre- and probiotic(s) by comparing the growth of infants randomized to the experimental formula versus the control formula from enrolment to 4 months of age.
This trial is a single-blind, randomized, controlled, parallel-designed trial to compare the effects of a2 Platinum® stage 1 infant formula versus conventional, A1 and A2 β-casein-containing stage 1 infant formula versus breastfeeding on crying, tolerance, gut health, and immune function.
The overarching aim of this project is to determine the test re-test reliability of 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements in infants. Primary endpoints include two separate measures of in vivo mitochondrial capacity (ATPmax) over a 1-10 day period to assess feasibility and reliability.
Inflammation can influence several biochemical measurements those commonly used to interpret micronutrient status in children. Our primary objective is to investigate the effects of inflammation on several biochemical measurements used to interpret micronutrient status in children. A total of 40 infants (9-18 mo of age) will participate in this study. Investigators will use PENTA vaccines as a means to induce controlled inflammation (closely mimic to natural infection). PENTA is a combination of five different vaccine antigens (Hepatitis B (HBV)/ Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib) / Tetanus-Diphtheria-whole cell Pertussis (TDwP)). The investigators will also use two different stable isotopic retinols for the assessment of total body vitamin A stores. Baseline blood samples (5 mL) will be obtained from all infants and then randomly selected 30 infants will receive PENTA vaccines, while the other 10 infants will receive no vaccines. 24 hours after vaccination a finger-prick blood sample will be obtained from the infants in the vaccinated group to measure CRP and on the same day, blood samples (5 mL) will be obtained from infants who develop inflammation (CRP> 5mg/L) in the vaccine group and also from infants in the control group. Thus estimated plasma micronutrients and vitamin A stores before and after inflammation will calculate the effects of inflammation on the interpretation of micronutrient deficiencies based on biochemical indicator assessment.
The aim of this trial is to show that infants fed these new formulas, containing a blend of 5 Human Milk Oligosaccharides (HMOs), allow for growth in line with infants fed formulas without HMOs. There will be different groups in the trial: three formula-fed groups and a breastfed group.
Multi-country, cross-sectional, observational study in diverse geographic locations all over the world.
Understand the impact of switching to a commercially available infant formula on gastrointestinal symptoms