View clinical trials related to Term Infants.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to determine the normal development of the human intestinal immune system in premature and mature neonatal life and to determine the pathophysiology behind life-threatening gastrointestinal diseases that appear during early life. The main questions aim to answer are: - to determine the normal development of the human intestinal immune system in premature and mature neonatal life and to determine the pathophysiology behind life-threatening gastrointestinal diseases that appear during early life. - is to investigate the development of the immune system in relation to enteral nutrition during the neonatal period. Participants will be asked to give faecal samples from day 1 of life and weekly for the following weeks until discharge (preterm infants). Further, surgery faecal samples and intestinal tissue will be collected proximal and distal to the pathology. In cases with a stoma, and when the child will undergo later reversal surgery, tissue samples from the proximal and distal ends of the intestine will be collected together with fecal samples (preterm and children up to 1 year of age who need to undergo intestinal surgery due to atresia).
The purpose of this two-month follow-up study is to continue to follow growth, safety, and other health outcomes of infants fed a new infant formula for term infants or comparator formula. A reference group of human milk-fed infants will also be followed. This study is designed in accordance with Good Clinical Practice guidelines.
This study aimed to examine the relation between trunk control and gross motor performance in LBW and NBW infants.
Infants will be fed infant formula and blood drawn to measure fatty acid levels in the blood.