View clinical trials related to Pregnancy Outcome.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to assess household food insecurity among slum-dwelling women in India and to explore if household food insecurity is associated with utilization of maternal healthcare services, birth outcomes and infant growth. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Is the utilization of maternal healthcare services antenatally, during delivery, and postnatally associated with household food insecurity among slum-dwelling women in Pine, India? - Is household food insecurity associated with birth outcomes and infant growth in these women? Participants will be asked: - For information related to socio-demographic characteristics, healthcare services utilization, food insecurity experience, dietary intake, and infant feeding indicators using a questionnaire. - Anthropometric measurements of the participant, her husband and her infant/s will be collected. - Two focused group discussions (FGDs) will also be conducted to gain insight into the perceptions of these women with respect to the utilization of maternal healthcare services. One FGD will be conducted for women who availed all the healthcare services and the other for those who did not adequately avail of the antenatal and postnatal services.
The prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in women of childbearing age is increasing rapidly, and low glucose compliance leads to an increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes for mothers and infants during pregnancy in women with T2DM. Real-time continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is an important tool for glucose monitoring and patient education, as it can continuously record blood glucose throughout the day and provide real-time feedback on high and low blood glucose levels. This is a multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled clinical study to investigate the efficacy, safety, and maternal and infant pregnancy outcomes of using real-time CGM monitoring compared with conventional self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) on the basis of multidisciplinary management in pregnant women with T2DM. One hundred and twenty pregnant women with T2DM in early pregnancy who were enrolled in intensive insulin therapy were randomly divided into the real-time CGM group and the conventional SMBG group. The real-time CGM intervention group wore real-time CGM for more than 50% of the pregnancy in addition to regular SMBG; the control group only performed regular SMBG. Both groups wore Medtronic iPro 2 for 3 days in early, mid and late pregnancy, and the time in the target range of blood glucose (TIR) was recorded in a blinded manner. Primary outcome: differences in TIR between the two groups of pregnant women in early, mid, and late pregnancy. Secondary outcomes included differences in glycated hemoglobin, hypoglycemia, insulin dose before delivery, pregnancy weight gain, and maternal and infant pregnancy outcomes.
The aim of this randomized controlled trial is to improve birth outcomes and long-term outcomes in mother and child by optimizing lifestyle,nutrition and stress experience in the preconception period and early pregnancy in women and men The main research question that will be addressed is: Does an intervention focused on optimizing preconception and early pregnancy lifestyle, nutrition and stress improve the birth outcomes and long-term outcomes in mother and child? Participants will receive an individual lifestyle consultation at the start of the study. Depending on their study arm, participants will receive an additional lifestyle program focused on health during preconception and early pregnancy, coping with stress and adherence to a healthy(er) lifestyle. The given advices are based on national guidelines. Researchers will compare the intervention group and control group to see if (adherence to) this lifestyle program improve birth outcomes and long-term outcomes in mother and child.
Multi-country, non-interventional cohort study.The objective of the study is to characterise the risk of pregnancy and offspring (neonatal and infant) outcomes in pregnancies with and without exposure to EVUSHELD (used as a treatment or prophylaxis) among women of child-bearing indicated for such treatment in the real-world setting, using secondary data from US, France and Canada.
A single center, randomized controlled trial was conducted to investigate whether individualized exercise guidance was more effective in improving pregnancy outcomes in normal pregnant women. What's more, the trial was also conducted to find out whether there is a mediating effect between prenatal exercise and pregnancy outcomes.
The study consists of collecting measurement data of the rachis in pregnant women and the subsequent outcome of her delivery. This will make it possible to validate a non-invasive imaging technique through software that can be used to study this anatomical curve proposing a new measurement method for the angle of lordosis. Finally, with the research data, the investigators will try to find a correlation between these variables (angle of lordosis and delivery outcome.
The aim of this study is to assess the possible negative effects of uterine artery ligation on ovarian reserve markers and subsequent pregnancy outcomes
The objective of this study is to determine the impact of outpatient cervical ripening with transcervical balloon placement for induction of labor at term on the length and cost of inpatient hospitalization when compared to inpatient cervical ripening.
Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) is a multifactorial disorder defined by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) as two or more clinical miscarriages (CMs). However, US guidelines differ with European guidelines which defined recurrent miscarriage as three consecutive prior pregnancy losses (The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Green-Top Guideline, 2011). Thus, there is currently no uniformly agreed upon definition of RPL, the ASRM recommends that a clinical evaluation for RPL commence following two early pregnancy losses, and that a threshold of three prior pregnancy losses be utilized for epidemiologic studies (The Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, 2012). Although the overall incidence of RPL is low and estimated at 5% of women (The Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, 2012), it presents a significant diagnostic and treatment challenge for both patients and clinicians. Guidelines for the evaluation of patients with RPL include evaluation of the uterine cavity and blood work to determine parental karyotypes and the presence of anti-phospholipid antibodies (APLA). In at least 50% of patients, however, an etiology for RPL is not identified (Stirrat, 1990; Stephenson, 1996; Stephenson and Kutteh, 2007; The Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, 2012). The ASRM recommends expectant management as the current standard of care for patients with unexplained RPL (The Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, 2012). Counseling patients with unexplained RPL to pursue expectant management presents several challenges. Patients often feel an urgency to conceive and expectant management can feel like a passive and time-consuming approach to conception. In addition, patients often carry a significant amount of guilt and grief in association with miscarriage. Attempting spontaneous conception can feel emotionally vulnerable; Despite reassurance of good prognosis, patients doubt that a subsequent pregnancy will be successful (Lachmi-Epstein et al., 2012). For all of these reasons, IVF and preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) have been investigated as a treatment strategy in RPL patients with the goals of shortening time to pregnancy, decreasing CM rates and increasing live birth (LB) rates.
Effect of lifestyle modification on pregnancy outcome for pregnant women with GDM