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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01628835

Low Glycemic Index (GI) Diet Management for Pregnant Woman With Overweight

Low Glycemic Index Diet Intervention on Insulin Resistance of Overweight Pregnant Women.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
400 (actual)
Sponsor
Children's Hospital of Fudan University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study is a randomized, single-blinded, controlled intervention trial to compare the effect of a low glycemic index diet versus diet recommended by the Chinese Dietary Guide for Pregnant Women on maternal and neonatal insulin resistance and adverse gestational events.

Detailed description

Overweight in pregnant women increases maternal insulin resistance and risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes. Recent evidence from both animal studies and human subject studies shows that adverse environmental exposures during pregnancy result in adverse influence on offsprings. The hypothesis of the current study is that the healthy intervention during pregnancy to overweight pregnant women--low glycemic diet, may improve the maternal and neonatal insulin resistance at birth. The current study adopts randomized, single-blinded, controlled intervention trial, gives low glycemic index diet intervention based on the national diet and physical activity recommendations for pregnant women to the intervention group and only national diet recommendations to the control group. Four diet consultation interviews will be done,at baseline (first prenatal examination), the end of the 1st trimester, the 2nd trimester and the 3rd trimester respectively, including diet assessment and diet consultation specifically to adopting low glycemic diet. Glycemic load of diet will be calculated based on 24 hour diet recall data for each individual at every visit to help to lower their diet glycemic load by modifying some daily foods. The effect of intervention is investigated by comparing the insulin resistance levels between the two arms at birth and when infants are at age 2. For discrete traits, such as incidence of gestational diabetes and gestational hypertension, Person's chi-square tests were used. For continuous traits, such as insulin resistance index, maternal weight gain and neonatal birth weight, we use t-tests for comparisons between two groups. The study expects that long-term low GI diet intervention have beneficial effects on controlling maternal and neonatal insulin resistance to overweight women and long term health.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALLow dietary glycemic index dietBased on the national diet and physical activity recommendations for pregnant women (total energy intake, protein and vitamin etc.), counseling for a low dietary glycemic index diet will be provided
BEHAVIORALNational recommendation dietProvision of food and dietary counseling according to the national prenatal nutrition recommendation without GI information

Timeline

Start date
2012-06-01
Primary completion
2016-02-01
Completion
2016-03-01
First posted
2012-06-27
Last updated
2016-08-24

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01628835. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.