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Malnutrition clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04857463 Completed - Clinical trials for Malnutrition Elderly

The Effects of Continuous Intake of ONS on the Nutritional Status of Taiwanese Elderly

Start date: November 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Past studies have pointed out that adequate intake of calories and protein in the elderly can deferred sarcopenia and debilitating conditions. Therefore, this study intends to use oral nutrition as a way of nutritional supplements, without affecting the subjects' normal meal intake, and supplements with snacks It is expected that there will be benefits in protein and muscle synthesis. However, the palatability of oral nutritional products will affect the effectiveness of nutritional supplements. Therefore, this test provides nutrients that are easy for the subjects to ingest with a variety of flavors, in order to achieve the test calories and protein needs. In order to investigate and compare the nutritional status, serum zinc and vitamin D status in healthy (MUST score 0) elderly and at risk of malnutrition elderly, we recruited healthy elderlies in the nursing home.

NCT ID: NCT04851327 Completed - Undernutrition Clinical Trials

Satiation Study With Children Attending a Tertiary Feeding Clinic

Start date: May 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a pilot study of children attending the Glasgow feeding clinic (GFC) which looks after children with severe feeding problems who commonly have low appetite and extreme thinness. The investigators want to find out if thin children respond to food in the same way, using an established method to assess energy compensation.

NCT ID: NCT04848129 Completed - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

Genetic Correlates of Wasting: a Pilot Study With Children Attending a Tertiary Feeding Clinic

Start date: May 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a pilot study of children attending the Glasgow feeding clinic (GFC) which looks after a range of children with severe feeding problems who commonly have low appetite and extreme thinness. The investigators want to find out if these children are more likely to carry genetic markers of thinness.

NCT ID: NCT04847973 Completed - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Food As Medicine for Heart Failure

FAM-HF
Start date: April 16, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Malnutrition and unintentional weight loss are highly prevalent among patients with heart failure (HF), with approximately 50% of patients with heart failure meeting malnutrition criteria. Poor dietary quality and micronutrient deficiencies are associated with higher rates of HF hospitalization and mortality. Therefore nutritional interventions to improve dietary quality and prevent malnutrition development may represent an effective strategy to improve HF-related health status and survival outcomes. To date, there are no large clinical trials investigating the efficacy of 'food as medicine' to improve morbidity and mortality for patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). The investigators plan to conduct a single-center, randomized pilot trial to assess the tolerability, feasibility, and efficacy of providing medically-tailored meals (MTMs) or protein supplementation shakes to patients with HFrEF and malnutrition. The investigators hypothesize that home delivery of MTMs or protein supplementation shakes will be feasible, well-tolerated and achieve a high degree of satisfaction for patients with HFrEF. The current pilot phase is a single arm non-randomized study. An initial phase has delivered a 12-week MTM dietary intervention. The MTMs are designed, prepared and delivered by our community based organized partner, Community Servings. A second phase will deliver a 12-week protein supplementation shake intervention, with 1 bottle to be consumed daily in addition to the participants' standard home diet. The investigators will measure HF-related health status, functional capacity, and biomarkers of heart failure and nutritional status before and after each study phase. The proposed study will facilitate a larger future randomized trial of nutritional intervention for patients with HFrEF and malnutrition, powered to examine the impact on HF hospitalizations and mortality.

NCT ID: NCT04829851 Completed - Overweight Clinical Trials

The PROTEIN Project

PROTEIN
Start date: October 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

New advances in information computer technology and artificial intelligence (AI) offer the possibility to create a personalized tool and support system for healthy living and eating, and this is the principal objective of the PROTEIN Project (an EU-funded consortium; Horizon 2020). In order to obtain information on the acceptability, usability and its effectiveness at facilitating behaviour change of the application within the home and store. A pilot trial will be conducted in participants who are overweight (BMI 25-29.9 kg/m2) and a separate group of participants who consume a low quality diet (low in fruit and vegetable intake) and/or have a nutrition deficiency (specifically iron-deficiency anaemia). During this study the subjects will be asked to attend the lab (or remotely due to covid restrictions) at the beginning of the study for baseline measurements and instructions on how to use / download the mobile application. Participants will have their anthropometrics measured (including height/ weight/ waist: hip circumference). The PROTEIN application will collect self-reported data from the user, which includes: user profile input, dietary and fluid intake, daily physical activity (such as step count), biochemistry, sleep and chewing (in- meal behaviour). Information on how users will interact with the app, which screens they use, how many log ons and how often data is inputted will also be collected. Throughout the trial, the participants will be contacted via the application or by the researchers to request feedback on their progress and to encourage reporting of any issues. Health care professionals will also be recruited to test the expert dashboard of the PROTEIN app. Through this system they will be able to provide nutrition/ physical activity advice directly to their patients and input their relevant biochemical results (such as haemoglobin for anaemic patients).

NCT ID: NCT04821076 Completed - Clinical trials for Exercise Intervention

Influence of Low Energy Availability on Skeletal Muscle and Cardiovascular Health

LEA
Start date: March 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The project is designed as a randomized controlled intervention trial in which 60 young trained (n = 30) (Population A) and recreationally active (n = 30) women (Population B) with regular menstruation are divided into four groups. Population A will receive a low-calorie diet + exercise or an energy balanced diet + exercise over 10 days. Population B will receive a low-calorie diet without exercise, or an energy balanced diet over 10 days. The participants are matched in pairs based on training history and randomized. Before the diet period, the groups will undergo a 6-day control period, during which all participants must take an energy-balanced diet (± training). After the 10 days of the diet intervention period, the groups will receive an energy-balanced diet for 2 days. Before, during, and after the trial period, participants will perform performance tests. In addition, 3 muscle biopsies, 2 adipose biopsies, blood samples, urine samples will be taken during the period, as well as resting metabolic rate, electrocardiogram, flow-mediated vasodilation, and body composition over the trial period. Muscle protein synthesis rate will be measured over the period using stable isotope technique, which includes ingestion of heavy water (D2O) and collection of saliva samples daily (days 0 to 16). The primary measurement parameter is changes in muscle protein synthesis rate.

NCT ID: NCT04820465 Completed - Inflammation Clinical Trials

Anemia in Older Adults

Start date: July 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A cross-sectional study with 829 older Mexican adults were recruited from July to September 2015, from four localities in the southern region of México. Older adults were interviewed at their homes and a fasting blood sample was obtained for analysis of micronutrient status (iron deficiency, vitamin B12 deficiency, folate deficiency, vitamin A deficiency and biomarkers of inflammation). The aim of the study was to identify the main causes of anemia in older adults with higher rates of anemia according to the recent data of the Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey.

NCT ID: NCT04798807 Completed - Malnourishment Clinical Trials

Screening Nutritional Status of Hospitalized Patients

Start date: January 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study investigated the results of the nutritional status of hospitalized patients with Nutritional Risk Screening 2002 (NRS-2002) and Subjective Global Assessment (SGA) screening and compared the effects of two screening method in predicting malnutrition.

NCT ID: NCT04791774 Completed - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Protein-bound Versus Free Amino Acid Nutrition During INtestinal Malabsorption in Critical Illness

PANINI
Start date: March 27, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In the current study, we willquantitate the difference in digestion and absorption kinetics of dietary whole protein versus free amino acids in vivo in critically ill patients admitted to the intensive care unit suffering from malabsorption. 16 adult, mechanically ventilated ICU patients with clinical signs of malabsorption (faecal weight >350 g/day) will be included. All patients will receive a primed continuous intravenous infusion of L-[ring2H5]-phenylalanine and L-[3,5-2H2]-Tyrosine for the duration of the study period. After reaching an isotopic steady state (1.5 hours), patients will receive either [1-13C]- phenylalanine labelled milk protein or free amino acids with an identical constitution and [1-13C]-phenylalanine. Main study endpoint will be the splanchnic extraction of phenylalanine, calculated from systemic [1-13C]- and L-[ring2H5]-phenylalanine enrichment.

NCT ID: NCT04777279 Completed - Sarcopenia Clinical Trials

Physical Exercise, Nutrition Supplement and Frailty of Older Population

Start date: December 9, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is aimed to explore the effect of physical exercise and nutrition supplement on improving frailty, depressive symptoms, and quality of life in community-dwelling older population.