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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (
acute diarrhea
)
2,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dioctahedral smectite, a non systemic antidiarrheal agent, is mucoprotective and absorbs enterotoxins and rotavirus as demonstrated in animal models. Smectite has been successfully used in various countries in children and adults with
acute diarrhea
. This study was to assess the efficiency of smectite associated with rehydration in infants with acute secretory diarrhea. Sixty-two hospitalized Thai infants, aged 1-24 months, with acute secretory diarrhea were randomly divided into 2 groups receiving (1) oral rehydration solution (ORS) (30 cases), (2) ORS and Smectite (3.6 g/day) (32 cases). Both groups were comparable for age, weight, nutritional status and duration of symptoms before treatment. All 62 infants received lactose free formula and chicken rice soup as the standard diet. Stool frequency, weight change and duration of diarrhea were recorded. The mean duration of diarrhea was 84.7 +/- 48.5 hours in group 1, and 43.3 +/- 25.1 hours in group 2 (p = 0.005). The number of infants with diarrhea was significantly lower in group 2 on Day 1 (p < 0.01) and Day 3 (p = 0.001); furthermore 27% of infants in group 1 and 3% in group 2 had still diarrhea on Day 5. The stool frequency and weight changes were not statistically different in the two groups. No major side effects were observed except two cases of
vomiting
and hardened stools. It is concluded that (1) Smectite shortens the course of acute secretory diarrhea in Thai infants; (2) smectite may reduce the occurrence of prolonged diarrhea; furthermore (3) in our study dioctahedral smectite was found to be safe in children aged 1 to 24 months.
...
PMID:Control study of oral rehydration solution (ORS)/ORS + dioctahedral smectite in hospitalized Thai infants with acute secretory diarrhea. 148 94
In a case-control study we evaluated the role of maternal behaviour, as reflected in maintenance of breast feeding and the use of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) at home during
acute diarrhoea
, in preventing dehydration in infants and young children. A systematic 5% sample was taken of all children aged 1-35 months attending the treatment centre of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, with acute watery diarrhoea of six days or less between August 1988 and September 1989. There were 285 children with moderate or severe dehydration as cases and 728 with no dehydration as controls in the study. In a multivariate analysis using a logistic regression model we showed that withdrawal of breast feeding during diarrhoea was associated with a five times higher risk of dehydration compared with continuation of breast feeding during diarrhoea at home. Lack of ORT with either complete formula or a salt and sugar solution at home was associated with 57% higher risk of dehydration compared with receipt of a reasonable amount of ORT after controlling for several confounders. The confounding variables--that is, lack of maternal education, history of
vomiting
, high stool frequency, young age and infection with Vibrio cholerae 01--were also shown to be risk factors of dehydration. Health education programmes should promote continued breast feeding and adequate oral rehydration therapy for infants with
acute diarrhoea
at home.
...
PMID:Breast feeding and oral rehydration at home during diarrhoea to prevent dehydration. 152 6
The Authors consider the clinical and etiological correlations in 94 children (0-36 months) with
acute diarrhoea
, hospitalised in 1989. They compare epidemiological data (sex, age, seasonality), clinical data (fever,
vomiting
, distinctive features of diarrhoea, abdominal pain) and laboratory data with the main etiological agents isolated.
...
PMID:[Clinical-etiological correlations in 94 cases of acute infantile diarrhea]. 166 44
233 cases with
acute diarrhoea
investigated, Clostridium difficile was isolated as a sole pathogen from 17 (7.3%) cases. The Major clinical features of these cases were watery diarrhoea (82.4%), bloody stool (17.6%),
vomiting
(64.8%), fever (17.6%) and abdominal pain (2.5%). Fourteen (82.4%) of 17 C difficile isolates were found to produce cytotoxin as detected by Verocell assay.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestation of Clostridium difficile enteritis in Calcutta. 181 1
Dehydration, in childhood as in adulthood, may origin from an inadequate water ingestion or an excessive water elimination. Causes may be found in fever,
vomiting
, scalds, pulmonary hyperventilation, diabetes. Water loss during
acute diarrhea
in children can be even 6-7 times higher in comparison with an healthy child. Together with water, electrolytes are lost. We differentiate dehydration in isonatremic d. (70% of cases), hyponatremic d. (10%) and hypernatremic d. (20%) basing on Sodium loss. Important dehydration causes severe clinical symptoms as shock, renal and cardiocirculatory failure, convulsion, coma. Symptoms at the central nervous system level derivate both from hyperosmolarity in brain cells and from thrombosis or hemorrhages in subdural sites. Dehydration, following
acute diarrhea
, is slight when weight loss is lower than 5%. The child health conditions still remain good. Dehydration become moderate if weight loss reaches 5% and the child starts suffering. When the weight loss reaches 10%, dehydration is now severe and circulatory deficiency becomes evident. When it is higher than 10%, prognosis is very severe and shock and coma may be observed. In the present work, we illustrate the different ways of rehydration after
acute diarrhea
. Initially, oral rehydration must be established with one of the oral solutions, differing each other for amount of electrolytes and glucose. Recently, a new solution, "supersolution", has been presented differing from the other ones for electrolytes concentration and for the presence of rice starch instead of glucose. In most cases of diarrhea, oral rehydration appears adequate but sometimes an intravenous rehydration becomes necessary, e.g. in case of
vomiting
, CNS depression and in any case of severe gastroenteric symptomatology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Dehydrated child]. 189 82
A total of 256 infants younger than three years, hospitalized by
acute diarrhea
, was studied from December 1983 to May 1984. Presence of rotavirus in their feces was demonstrated in 27.7%; in 4.3% of them, rotaviruses were associated with other agents.
Vomiting
followed by respiratory symptoms and fever were the main clinical symptoms observed in such patients, and in most of them diarrhea was profuse and liquid. Influence on infection by rotavirus of maternal feeding, hygienic-sanitary conditions, presence of domestic animals, and so forth, could not be demonstrated.
...
PMID:[Clinical and epidemiologic aspects of acute diarrhea caused by rotavirus in children. Cuba, 1982-1984]. 196 35
In order to assess and characterize adynamic ileus (AI) complicating
acute diarrhoea
(AD) in infants, 802 consecutive admissions were studied. Diagnosis was suspected in 23 patients with abdominal distension and confirmed by radiological study in 16 whose age range was 14 ds to 6 mo. Of these late patients, 9/16 were malnourished. Age was less than, but nutritional status similar to that of all patients admitted with ADD.
Vomiting
(14/16), silent or almost silent abdomen (10/16), protracted course of diarrhoea (9/16) and increased gastric content (6/16) were the most common clinical findings in addition to abdominal distension and X Ray films suggestive of AI (inclusion criteria). Lack of constipation was a relevant finding. Treatment included temporal discontinuance of oral feedings, intravenous fluids administration, nasogastric and rectal tube and antibiotics. Lethality rate was 4/16. Duration of AI was an average of 2 days in survivors and 4 days in the remainder infants. It is concluded that AI is an infrequent complication of AD (0.19% of cases), which should be suspected in infants less that 6 mo old with diarrhoea and abdominal distension.
...
PMID:[Manifestations of paralytic ileus in infants hospitalized for acute diarrheal syndrome]. 215 17
Oral rehydration therapy (ORT) has been shown to be useful in decreasing mortality, reducing treatment costs and diminishing the frequency of complications in children under the age of five with
acute diarrhea
. The current concept of ORT includes not only the increase in the intake of fluids and the administering of oral solution in order to prevent or treat dehydration, but also the continuance of everyday feeding, the teaching of the child's mother to detect signs of dehydration and other alarming changes, as well as the non-administering of medication, especially those considered as anti-diarrheal or anti-
vomiting
, and limiting the use of antimicrobials, only to be used in special cases. The theoretical know-how of these concepts has been seen to be insufficient in order to increase the use of community-wide Oral Rehydration Therapy, being this the main purpose for the establishment of the Oral Rehydration Ward in teaching hospitals of second and third level, where the majority of its' personnel must come into contact with and share the responsibility of treating children with diarrhea. Within these wards students obtain information, ability and assurance in the effective actual management of children with diarrhea, including the correction of the state of dehydration through the administering of oral solutions. Another complementary benefit from the coming about of this ward is the decrease in the need to hospitalize the majority of the patient with diarrhea therefore reducing costs and any related complications. Oral rehydration therapy; diarrhea; dehydration; oral solutions.
...
PMID:[Oral rehydration at a third-level service]. 218 57
A total of 186 infants, suffering from
acute diarrhea
were studied and divided into two groups: 84 children were placed in group A and given the ORS recommended by the World Health Organization which contains sodium and glucose at concentrations of 60 and 90 mmol/L respectively and an osmolality of 311 mOsm/kg (mmol/kg) (ORS-90). Group B included 82 children who received an ORS containing sodium and glucose at concentrations of 60 and 90 mmol/L respectively and with an osmolality of 240 mOsm/kg (mmol/kg) (ORS-60). Seven belonging to group A (8.3%) required intravenous rehydration due to the severity of the diarrhea (three cases), persistent
vomiting
(three cases) and paralytic ileus (one case), while only two cases belonging to group B (2.5%) required intravenous rehydration due to severe losses through feces (one case) and another due to paralytic ileus (one case). No differences were observed due to the variations in sodium concentrations among either of the groups of patients, whether that be in the natremias when admitted or once rehydrated, with a general tendency towards the correction of the hypernatremia or hyponatremia seen during admittance with both types of ORS. A similar situation was observed with the variations in serum potassium. The results obtained from this study show the different advantages of using an ORS with lesser sodium and glucose concentrations as well as minor osmolality with those from using the solution recommended by the World Health Organization, when a lesser index of failures is observed in the treatment of children with
acute diarrhea
with oral rehydration therapy. Yet before widely recommending its' use, it should be demonstrated that the new ORS induces lesser losses through feces during the rehydrating period in children dehydrated due to
acute diarrhea
.
...
PMID:[Comparative study of 2 oral rehydration solutions containing 60 or 90 mmol/L of sodium and with different osmolalities]. 227 Nov 25
A total of 186 infants suffering from dehydration due to
acute diarrhea
were studied and divided into two groups: 84 children were placed in group A and received the oral rehydration solution (ORS) recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), know as ORS-90 and those placed in group B were given an ORS with 60 and 90 mmol/L of sodium and glucose, respectively, with an osmolality of 240 mOsm/kg (ORS-60). Seven patients from group A (8.3%) and two from group B (2.5%) could not be orally rehydrated and required intravenous rehydration. The children were divided according to their weight for their age into eutrophics, grade I malnutrition (10 to 25% deficit), grade II (26 to 40% deficit) and grade III (more than 40% deficit). In those patients who evolved favorably, the average rehydration time was 4.5 to 5.3 hours, independently from their nutritional state. In the same way, no important variations were seen in the average sodium and potassium serum levels once the dehydration was corrected, in either of the groups. Yet, both groups showed a persistence in hypokalemia and hyperkalemia seen when admitted, once the dehydration was corrected, demonstrating that the short time needed for the correction of the dehydration was insufficient to completely corrected the changes in serum potassium. Closer studies must be conducted on the hydric balance to adequately demonstrate if the new ORS-60 induces lesser losses through
vomiting
and feces when compared to the ORS-90 recommended by the WHO.
...
PMID:[Oral rehydration solutions with 60 or 90 nmol/L of sodium for infants with acute diarrhea in accord with their nutritional status]. 228 64
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