View clinical trials related to Infant Growth.
Filter by:The aim of the study is to provide proof that giving fish during early complementary feeding improves infant linear growth outcomes.
The purpose of this study is to assess growth of preterm infants fed human milk supplemented with one of two commercially available human milk fortifiers.
Current research shows that dairy protein accelerates infant weight gain, which is a risk factor for later on obesity and metabolic syndrome. However, dietary protein from other sources haven't been studied yet. This longitudinal study will compare two complementary feeding regimens with dietary protein mainly from 1) meat; 2) dairy on infant growth, body composition and gut microbiome from 5 to 12 months of age in formula fed infants. Healthy infants at approximately 5 months of age will be randomized to either a meat protein, or a dairy protein group with complementary protein mainly from meat or dairy. Infants will consume one of these diets for 7 months (6-12 months of age) and infant growth, body composition, growth biomarkers and gut microbiome will be measured to compare between groups and over time.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, reference-controlled 4-month pilot safety study to evaluate the effects of specific lipid fractions-enriched infant formulae on growth of infants aged 0-4 months. The study will test the hypothesis that growth of infants fed the specific lipid fractions-enriched infant formulae will be noninferior to growth of infants fed standard infant formula.
The specific aims of this project is to determine the impact of a daily intake of one half ounce of lyophilized meat between 6-18 months of age (0.5 oz for 6-12 mo; 0.75 oz for 12-18 mo) on linear growth velocity, zinc and iron intakes and status, brain growth and neurocognitive development, and infectious disease morbidity in populations traditionally dependent on non-micronutrient fortified plant foods for complementary feeding.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether systematic use of the Newborn Individualized Developmental Care Assessment Program (NIDCAP®) improves the neurologic development of children and the parental competence of mothers.