Clinical Trials Logo

Infant Sleep Problem clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Infant Sleep Problem.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05159141 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Infant Sleep Problem

The Role of Circadian Rhythm in the Effect of Sleep Intervention on Obesity Prevention in Early Childhood

Start date: January 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Over the last 40 years, obesity has increased dramatically among all age groups, especially in infants and young children, and became an important global public health challenge, thus early prevention is the highest priority. Emerging studies have found that infant sleep intervention is very likely to become one of the most important strategies for early obesity prevention. However, its action path is not clear, making the target of sleep intervention relatively vague. The role of circadian rhythm in human health status has received increasing attention in recent years. Both animal experiment-based studies and adult clinic-based studies have found significant effect of the circadian rhythm on obesity and other metabolic disorders. Therefore, the present research will establish a community-based 1:1 parallel multi-center randomized controlled trial of sleep intervention cohort in communities with highly rapid weight gain at the early infancy stage. Investigators will collect daily rhythm data, including sleep-wake rhythm, rest-activity rhythm, light-dark cycle, and feeding-fasting, as well as the real-world golden standard of circadian rhythm assessed by seven times saliva melatonin, to test the impact of the sleep intervention program, to determine the causal mechanism of circadian rhythm in the occurrence and  development of obesity and metabolic disorder early in life. Our study will provide a new theoretical basis for the establishment of the stable circadian rhythm for the prevention of infant obesity, which has important public health significance.

NCT ID: NCT04048785 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Infant Sleep Problem

Behavioral Sleep Intervention and Infant Sleep and Social-emotional Development

Start date: April 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

An estimated 30-50% of infants have frequent problematic night wakings. Sleep disturbances have been linked to various adverse outcomes in children, including social-emotional development delay. Despite some evidence of the effectiveness of Infant behavioral sleep intervention, the benefits on children's social-emotional development are worthy of further exploration. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of behavioral sleep interventions on improving infant sleep and social-emotional development. Infants with behavioral sleep disturbances are randomized into one of the two conditions: Behavioral sleep intervention or no treatment. And infant sleep and social-emotional development were assessed for both group at baseline, and four and eight weeks after sleep intervention.