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Infant Gut Microbiome clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Infant Gut Microbiome.

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NCT ID: NCT03994315 Completed - Clinical trials for Infant Gut Microbiome

The EFFECT Study: Probiotic and HMO Supplementation in Infants

EFFECT
Start date: September 12, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Lacto-N-tetraose (LNT) is a human milk oligosaccharide (HMO) present in human colostrum and milk. HMOs are largely undigestable and have no direct nutritive benefit to the infant, but act as a prebiotic substrate for beneficial bacteria (bifidobacteria, in particular) in the infant gut. Exclusively formula-fed infants lack HMOs in their diet in the absence of naturally occurring HMOs from breast milk. The proposed clinical study will evaluate the ability of a prebiotic supplement (LNT) to initiate intestinal colonization of a probiotic strain (B. infantis EVC001) in exclusively formula-fed infants. B. infantis EVC001 has been shown to be well-tolerated and safely consumed in breastfed infants. This study also aims to evaluate the safety and tolerability of LNT in different doses when consumed daily with B. infantis EVC001.

NCT ID: NCT02142647 Completed - Infant Growth Clinical Trials

Effect of Protein From Complementary Foods on Infant Growth, Body Composition and Gut Health

Start date: March 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

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.