View clinical trials related to Microbiota.
Filter by:This is a prospective, observational clinical cohort study involving 100 mothers and their very preterm infants born at less than 32 weeks gestation. The purpose of this study is to gain a thorough understanding of the microbiome (the collection of microbes in a biological site) establishment in very preterm infants. The study will also examine the perinatal factors associated with the pattern of microbiome development, the metabolome and immune development of this population in the first months of life. All participants will be recruited from the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Foothills Medical Centre (FMC) in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Premature birth (birth before 37 weeks of pregnancy) occurs in about one in ten pregnancies each year. Babies that are born after less than 32 weeks of pregnancy are considered to be very premature babies. When babies are born very prematurely their gut is not as developed. One important factor in gut health is the large community of microbes (tiny living things such as bacteria) that live on the human body called the microbiome. Recent studies have shown that premature babies are more likely to have changes in their gut microbiome that are associated with health issues. However, sciences has not yet discovered what specific microbiome features are involved in development of premature babies. Therefore, this study examines the impact of very premature birth on the premature baby's microbiome. The kind of microbes that make up the microbiome in the gut in the first months of life have a major impact on the microbiome that will form during childhood. There are many environmental factors during pregnancy, birth and in first months of life that can impact the microbiome development. These factors include diet, exposure to antibiotics, surgical procedures, and birth mode. This study will investigate how these factors influence the types of early microbes present in preterm infants. The hypothesis of the study is that specific microbial patterns, trajectories and/or metabolites will be significantly associated with single or a combination of perinatal maternal and/or infant factors. The primary objective of the study is to learn more about the development of the microbiome in very premature babies in the first months of their life. To do this, participating baby's stool and urine samples will be studied. A secondary objective of the study is to find out how environmental factors impact the development of the microbiome and the health of preterm infants. In order to do this, maternal microbiome samples will be studied and information regarding maternal health, nutrition and environment during pregnancy will be collected. As well, information about the birth and health of participating preterm neonates will be collected.
Extensive studies suggest composition of microbiome of respiratory samples or lung tissues in COPD patients is different from the composition of healthy smokers. Aim of this study is to analyze composition of microbiome of various samples (e.g. feces, sputum, and urine) and to describe difference of composition between COPD patients and healthy smokers.
It is of major importance to refine prevention strategies in order to alleviate inflammation, insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome and it appear that improving gut health and microbiota represent a promising strategy. Cranberry-enriched diets may help prevent metabolic syndrome and its associated chronic diseases by a protective effect of gut health and microbiota. It is therefore highly relevant to test the hypothesis that a whole cranberry powder supplements (which include a mixture of polyphenols, free and fiber-associated proanthocyanidins, and fruits fibers) is associated with changes on the gut health and microbiota playing a major role in alleviating inflammation and obesity-associated metabolic disorders.
To elucidate the longitudinal development of intestinal microbiota in patients with IL10RA deficiency after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). The investigators planned to collect fecal samples from IL10RA-deficient patients who received HSCT. Samples were collected more than once every three days after engraftment in lamina flow ward and at least once a week before discharge. Microbial DNA was extracted from the fecal samples. And all analysis was based on the next generation sequencing data.
Several human intervention studies have also been performed that demonstrated beneficial effects of high polyphenol fruits and vegetable on the intestinal microbiome. No information is available about the effect of spice consumption on the gut microbiome. This proposed pilot study will assess the ability of daily consumption of 5 grams of mixed spices to alter the gut microbiome composition compared to placebo in a free-living population.
This was a multi-center, 14-day clinical use study with a 7-day regression period, being conducted to assess the changes in the skin microbiome with two moisturizers in female and male subjects 16-50 years of age with mild to moderate eczema that experienced a recent itch flare up.
Background: Humans live in symbiosis with microbes and their implication for health and disease is evident. The importance of microbiome-gut-brain axis in psychiatric disorders is an area of increasing research interest. OCD is a promising target for microbiome research as Pediatric Acute-onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS)/ Pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections (PANDAS) are reactions to infectious agents precipitating acute onset of severe OCD symptoms. Furthermore, preliminary evidence has associated probiotic treatment with alleviation of OCD symptoms. We propose the first clinical study on the microbiome and its effects on OCD patients. Aim: To analyze the gut microbiota in patients with OCD compared with healthy matched controls and assess changes in microbial composition following treatment. Outcome measures: Differences in alpha diversity, beta diversity, and taxa abundance of bacterial groups (at the phylum, class, order, family, genus and species levels) and severity of OCD symptoms. Moreover, functional profiling will be conducted. Methods: Our aim is to enroll 32 OCD patients and 32 matched controls. Shotgun metagenomic sequencing will be used. Sequenced data will be processed followed by non-parametric statistical testing. Significance: gut microbiome in patients with OCD beofre and after ERP treatment has never been done before. The microbial composition may impact on OCD symptoms, severity, and chronicity and could inform future therapeutic possibilities.
This is a single-center, double-blind, randomized controlled trial, with parallel groups and reference group. The aim of the study was to investigate whether feed a fermented formula milk leads to an increase of anti-microbial peptides such as catelecidine, alpha and beta defensins and secretory-IgA, compared to feed a standard formula (Plasmon Primigiorni), according to mode of delivery. Breastfed infants were the reference group.
Thyroid cancer is a common neck malignancy. Currently, total thyroidectomy or subtotal thyroidectomy is the main method for the treatment of thyroid cancer patients. However, some thyroid cancer may still have residual thyroid tissue after operation. Therefore, in the differentiated thyroid In the treatment of cancer, iodine 131 treatment is mainly used because iodine 131 can emit high-energy beta rays, destroying the residual tissue of thyroid cancer and achieving good therapeutic goals. However, in the treatment of iodine-131, certain salivary glands are inevitably damaged, and the patient will have dry mouth symptoms. After the same treatment with iodine-131, some patients will experience gastrointestinal reactions such as nausea and vomiting. The therapeutic efficacy of iodine-131 depends on the lesion's uptake of iodine-131, which requires an increase in serum TSH levels. All patients in this study had stopped taking thyroid hormone for 3-4 weeks before iodine 131 treatment, making serum The TSH level is greater than 30 mU/L. At this time, the patient is in hypothyroidism. People with hypothyroidism experience dry mouth, dry skin, constipation, pain, cold, poor memory, depression, and weight gain. Many studies have pointed out that some cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy, also have an impact on the microbial flora. However, studies on the relationship between microecology, hypothyroidism and iodine-131 treatment, probiotics in the prevention of hypothyroidism and iodine-131 treatment The link between the effects of side effects remains unclear. Therefore, the team will conduct a correlation study between microbes and hypothyroidism, iodine-131 treatment.
Thyroid cancer (TC), the most common malignancy of the endocrine system, is currently the fifth most common malignancy diagnosed in women (1). The incidence of TC in the United States has increased by an average of 3% per year over the past 4 decades. Much progress has been made in exploring the etiology and pathogenesis of thyroid cancer, while the exact etiology remains unknown, TC is thought to arise from interactions between genetic susceptibility factors, epigenetic effects, and various environmental factors. Besides the improvement of diagnosis, TC increasing incidence emphasize that other important factors such as the environment play an important role in disease pathogenesis. While microbiota as an environment factor to some cancers accept widespread attention, if microbiota also as a risk factor for TC, it is worthy to be considered.