Background/Aims: In contrast to many other studies of probiotic species, the number of publications evaluating Bifidobacterium lactis and its combinations with prebiotics as treatments for acute infectious diarrhea is limited. We investigated the synbiotic effects of B. lactis B94 plus inulin on acute infectious diarrhea. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted on children with acute diarrhea between the ages of 2 and 60 months. The patients were administered 5×10 10 colony-forming units (CFU) of B. lactis B94 plus 900 mg inulin or placebo, once a day for five days. Stools were examined for Rotavirus, Adenovirus, Entamoeba histolytica, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, Clostridium difficile, Cryptosporidium, and parasites. Results: We examined 79 patients in the synbiotic group and 77 patients in the placebo group. The duration of diarrhea was significantly reduced in the synbiotic group in comparison with the placebo group (3.9±1.2 days vs. 5.2±1.3 days, respectively; p<0.001). Moreover, the number of diarrheal stools on the third day was significantly lower in the synbiotic group than in the placebo group (5.5±2.9 vs. 8.3±3.01, respectively; p<0.001). Diarrhea in the synbiotic-group patients with rotavirus infection was of a significantly shorter duration (3.2±1.3 days vs. 5.2±1.3 days, respectively; p=0.001). Duration of diarrhea in patients who started the synbiotic treatment within the first 24 h was shorter than that in the patients who started the treatment later (3.9±1.1 days vs. 4.8±1.8 days, respectively; p=0.002). Conclusion: Treatment with 5 × 10 10 CFU of B. lactis B94 plus 900 mg inulin shortened the duration of acute watery diarrhea by an average of 31 h. This decrease was most pronounced in cases of Rotavirus diarrhea.
The feeding at the fourth hour after PEG placement was safe and well tolerated by patients and shortened the duration of the hospital stay. The use of prophylactic antibiotics seems to be unnecessary before the procedure.
Bezoar is defined as the accumulation of organic or nonbiological substances inside the gastrointestinal system. Trichobezoars are the most frequently detected ones and are mostly present in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders. The continuance of the trichobezoar tail-shaped extension over the duodenum and jejunum is described in Rapunzel syndrome. Both conditions are rarely reported in children. The present case submitted here is related to a 5-year-old girl referred with an abdominal mass and anemia, diagnosed with Rapunzel syndrome and developing trichobezoar due to iron deficiency and pica.
Congenital diarrheal disorders consist of a variety of chronic enteropathies. There are approximately 30 different diseases that can be classified into four groups according to the mechanisms involved in pathogenesis: (i) absorption and transport of nutrients and electrolytes; (ii) enterocyte differentiation and polarization; (iii) enteroendocrine cell differentiation; and (iv) modulation of the intestinal immune response. Affected patients often present with life-threatening diarrhea, in the first few weeks of life. A new disorder, enteric anendocrinosis, which is characterized by severe malabsorptive diarrhea and a lack of intestinal enteroendocrine cells has recently been described in six patients with recessively inherited mutations in the Neurogenin-3 gene. In this report we describe a seventh case with a review of the literature.
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