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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (
acute diarrhea
)
2,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A comparison is made between two groups of children aged 1-24 months and admitted to a teaching University Hospital due to
acute diarrhea
and severe dehydration. One group (n = 119) received a diluted cow's milk formula and the other (n = 109) a full-strength formula. Duration of diarrhea was similar: In the group that received full-strength milk weight gain was greater during diarrhea (5.03 vs. 1.80 g/kg/day, P < 0.01) and during the hospital stay (5.39 vs. 2.33 g/kg/day, P < 0.001). Weight for height z-scores and weight for height as percentage of median improved during the hospital stay only in the group that received the full-strength formula. Full-strength cow's milk seems to be an adequate routine regimen even for children with
acute diarrhea
that must be treated for severe dehydration. In developing countries diarrhea and dehydration are a disease of small children. As rates of exclusive breast feeding are low, mainly in the urban setting, cow's milk is the main and sometimes the only food available.
Lactose
-free formulae are priced out of reach of the poor people and in Latin America there is no accepted tradition for use of fermented milk products. Our study is an indication that use of undiluted cow's milk may be effective for the routine treatment of
acute diarrhea
in children that must be treated as inpatients due to severe dehydration.
...
PMID:Use of undiluted whole cow's milk is effective for the routine treatment of children with acute diarrhea and severe dehydration. 981 79
(1) Dehydration is the most immediate complication of
acute diarrhoea
. Infants still die by dehydration, or suffer severe repercussions. (2) Thirst is an early sign of dehydration in an infant. Other signs are delayed capillary filling, absence of tears, mucosal dryness and a "sickly" appearance. Fever or vomiting in the first 24 hours facilitate dehydration. Weight loss is the main clinical index of the degree of dehydration. (3) Oral rehydration with glucose-electrolyte solution is as effective as intravenous rehydration. It must start immediately dehydration occurs. Infants with signs of severe dehydration must be hospitalised. (4) Oral rehydration of a vomiting infant is feasible, by giving a teaspoonful of solution every one or two minutes. (5) A dehydrated infant rarely refuses oral rehydration solutions. (6) Beverages such as cola drinks are inappropriate for rehydration, as they contain too little sodium and are excessively hyperosmolar, which may worsen the diarrhoea. Rice gruel is better. (7) Antidiarrhoeal drugs do not prevent dehydration. (8) Feeding must be resumed as soon as dehydration has been corrected, as it shortens the course of diarrhoea. Continuing maternal breast-feeding reduces the severity of diarrhoea.
Lactose
-free "milk" has no demonstrated benefit. (9) Those in charge of an infant with diarrhoea must know how to prevent severe dehydration, which can occur very rapidly. Fluid intake must always be increased in an infant with diarrhoea. Sachets of powder for oral rehydration should be kept at home. Their prescription and dispensing should be accompanied by written instructions.
...
PMID:Acute diarrhoea in infants: oral rehydration is crucial. 1160 16
The prognosis of
acute diarrhoea
in infants is most often satisfactory in industrialized countries. However, it has been estimated that 10 to 15 children die every year in France from acute dehydration due to
acute diarrhoea
. In spite of an increasing use over the least few years, oral rehydration solutions (ORS) are used in only 70% of infants presenting with
acute diarrhoea
. The use of homemade ORS, plain water or fizzy drink should be strictly avoided. In case of
acute diarrhoea
there is no indication to stop breastfeeding or the use of infant formula for more than 4 hours. Lactose intolerance is observed in only 5-10% of infants.
Lactose
free formulae should only be used in infants with severe, persistent or recurrent diarrhoea. Under 3-4 months of age, infants with severe diarrhoea should receive for a period of 2-4 weeks lactose free protein hydrolysate formulae. Racecadotril is the only drug with anti-diarrheal properties, with a reduction of the stool output of 50%. Oral antibiotics should only be used in case of Shigella infection or in case of bacterial infection with severe sepsis or underlying debilitating disease. Oral Rotavirus vaccine, that is not reimbursed yet in France, has been shown to dramatically reduce the number of severe cases of diarrhoea with dehydration, and has been associated with a striking reduction of both morbidity and mortality, as well as of the number of hospitalisations during periods of epidemics.
...
PMID:[Prevention and treatment of acute diarrhea in infants]. 1762 85
The management of
acute diarrhoea
in France improved during the last ten years, with a large increase of oral rehydration solution (ORS) prescription in infants. Severity assessment is too often based on an uncertain evaluation of weight loss instead of a clinical determination. Telephone triage is not accurate without use of protocols and decision-making guidelines. Laboratory tests are rare in ambulatory management but still too frequent in hospital management of children with oral rehydration. ORS prescription of general practitioners regularly increased: 16% in 1988, 29% in 1996, 39% in 2001; and 71% in 2005 (after their reimbursement). The quality of oral rehydration advice remains insufficient. Intravenous rehydration on admission remains still too frequent. Drugs prescriptions include 2 or 3 drugs, with a decrease of loperamide and antibiotics, and an increase of racecadotril (81%).
Lactose
-free milk prescriptions in infants dropped from 46% in 1996 to 16% in 2005. Isolation and disinfection procedures are insufficient. Rotavirus nosocomial infections incidence is high: 1,6 to 6,3/1000 children less than 5 years of age, contributing to high direct costs.
...
PMID:[Improvement in the management of acute diarrhoea in France?]. 1796 13