View clinical trials related to Malabsorption.
Filter by:Children with inadequate intestinal absorption due to loss of large amounts of small bowel require intravenous nutrition (feeding through the vein) to sustain hydration and nutrition to avoid starvation and dehydration; however, intravenous (IV) nutrition can lead to complications including liver failure. Tube feeding directly to the small intestine avoids the complications of IV nutrition, but fats are not fully digestible due to inadequate bowel function. We propose to predigest the fat using a small cartridge attached to the feeding tube to allow for rapid absorption with the possibility of reducing or eliminating the need for intravenous nutrition. Goal of the observational study is to determine safety and tolerability of Relizorb Enzyme Cartridge for an additional 90 days after the original trial
This is a market research, observational study to evaluate the tolerability and acceptability of MCT supplements for young children, young people and adults with intractable epilepsy, GLUT-1 or PDHD from 3 years to adulthood.
This is a market research, observational study to evaluate the tolerability and acceptability of MCT supplements for young children and young people with intractable epilepsy, GLUT-1 or PDHD from 3 years to adulthood. Patients with a confirmed diagnosis of a fatty acid oxidation disorder, which requires a specialist diet including MCT will be included in this study
This project will test a unique botanical formula designed to inhibit alpha amylase (the primary starch degrading digestive enzyme) and inhibit sucrase (the primary sucrose degrading digestive enzyme) in order to reduce acute post prandial glycemia regardless of nutritive carbohydrate source.
Children with inadequate intestinal absorption due to loss of large amounts of small bowel require intravenous nutrition (feeding through the vein) to sustain hydration and nutrition to avoid starvation and dehydration; however, intravenous (IV) nutrition can lead to complications including liver failure. Tube feeding directly to the small intestine avoids the complications of IV nutrition, but fats are not fully digestible due to inadequate bowel function. We propose to predigest the fat using a small cartridge attached to the feeding tube to allow for rapid absorption with the possibility of reducing or eliminating the need for intravenous nutrition
Oral nutritional supplements and enteral tube feeds are commonly used to meet the nutritional requirements of patients with disease-related malnutrition, or who require medical nutrition support for other reasons. Some patients may not tolerate standard formulations containing whole proteins (typically due to maldigestion/malabsorption) leading to gastrointestinal symptoms (i.e. vomiting and diarrhoea). Without appropriate management, this may lead to reduced nutritional intake, increased nutritional losses and risk of malnutrition in patients who may already have elevated nutritional requirements due to their clinical conditions. Poor tolerance to standard feed formulations can be managed with extensively hydrolysed (peptide-based) enteral feeds, where the protein source is provided in smaller proteins. Patients with elevated nutritional requirements, poor tolerance, maldigestion and/or malabsorption often require a higher energy, higher protein feed to meet their nutritional requirements in a smaller volume of feed. The study feed is a high energy (1.5kcal/ml), high protein (7.5g protein/100ml) peptide-based feed, available as a 500ml enteral tube feed, and a 200ml Vanilla-flavour oral nutritional supplement. The study will investigate the gastrointestinal tolerance, compliance and acceptability of the high energy, high protein peptide-based feed in 60 adult patients requiring a peptide-based feed, in several NHS sites across England. Patients will be asked to take the study feed for 28 days. Data will be recorded using questionnaires with no invasive measures. The primary outcome is gastrointestinal tolerance with secondary outcomes of compliance, acceptability, nutrient intake and anthropometry.
12 month study testing mobile delivery of health information and connections to professionals and peers to improve health of teen/young adult HPN users.
The study is designed to observe the use of a peptide-based oral nutrition supplement in adults with chronic malabsorption or maldigestion who require supplemental nutrition as assessed by a clinician.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate amino acid absorption with two different type of proteins.
The study shall investigate whether isomaltulose - is digested and absorbed to a comparable degree like other carbohydrates (CHO) used as ingredients for this age group (e.g. sucrose), by measuring the H2 exhalation in the postprandial period - does not mediate abdominal discomfort or diarrhoea and is therefore as well tolerated as other CHO (e.g. sucrose), by/in healthy infants aged 6 to 12 months. It is hypothesized that isomaltulose, provided with a standard follow-on formula, 1. will not significantly increase the mean basal breath H2-excretion rate (determined as the incremental area under the curve (iAUC) of H2-exhalation) over a 3 h postprandial period compared to a sucrose containing standard follow-on formula. 2. will not lead to a significantly different gastrointestinal tolerance in the conse-quent 24 h after formula consumption compared to a sucrose containing standard follow-on formula in infants aged 6 to 12 months.