View clinical trials related to Transmission.
Filter by:Through contact with peers in daycare and (primary)school young children play a large role in spreading respiratory pathogens. In this study the investigators will investigate this transmission, the subsequent colonization and infection dynamics, and their association with clinical symptoms and local immune response through dense minimally-invasive sampling. This study will allow us a unique insight into the transmission-, infection-, and colonization-potential of the respiratory pathogens.
The epidemiology of H. pylori infection among children in Slovenia has not been investigated. Therefore, we are conducting a study to examine the epidemiology of H. pylori and associated risk factors among children in Slovenia.
The investigators will recruit mother-infant dyads to attend weekly lactation support groups and randomize infants to receive either an HMO consuming or non-HMO consuming probiotic. The investigators will collect infant stool before and after support group attendance. The investigators will use qPCR and metagenomic sequencing to test if the study probiotics or other bacteria transmit between infants. The investigators anticipate HMO consuming bacteria will and non-HMO consuming bacteria will not transmit between infants.
Vertical HCV Transmission has been extensively studied, with a risk around 5% (range: 3 to 10%). Spontaneous viral clearance in infected children during childhood can occur, but data about this phenomenon are scarse, justifying the study.