The incidence of UGI bleeding is high in children requiring mechanical ventilation. Organ failure and high pressure ventilator setting are significant risk factors for UGI bleeding.
Chronic watery diarrhoea can be a presentation of gastrointestinal disease itself or a less-evident systemic disease. A 17-month-old boy presented with intractable diarrhoea, failure to gain weight, refractory tachycardia and severe hypertension. The ability to recognise and make a quick diagnosis of secretory type of diarrhoea dictated the outcome of patients with this ailment. Catecholamine hypersecretion was considered with the additional clues of refractory tachycardia and hypertension, a well-recognised phenomenon of neuroblastic tumours. A neuroblastic tumour can lead to vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) overexpression, which may result in secretory diarrhoea. In this situation, measurements of plasma VIP enabled crucial diagnosis. Imaging studies were used to identify and localise a neuroblastic tumour. Subsequent removal of the tumour was curative and led to the resolution of the symptoms.
Background: Signs of feeding intolerance are common in formula-fed infants. We evaluated the clinical response to a partially hydrolyzed 100% whey protein formula with high sn-2 palmitate and reduced lactose (FA) and to an alpha-lactalbumin-enriched whey-predominant intact protein formula with full lactose (FB) in healthy full-term infants with parent-reported signs of feeding intolerance. Methods: In a double-blind, parallel-group trial in 6 Asian study centers, exclusively formula-fed infants aged 30 to 90 days, whose parents reported fussiness-crying for ≥2 hours/day plus gassiness and/or stooling difficulty, and intended to switch formula, were randomly assigned to FA (n = 130) or FB (n = 129) for 14 days. Primary endpoint was daily duration of fussiness-crying. Secondary endpoints included gassiness, spitting-up, vomiting, sleep pattern, Infant Gastrointestinal Symptom Questionnaire (IGSQ) Index, infant temperament and maternal anxiety. Results: Mean ± SE minutes/day of fussiness-crying in the 256 analyzed infants (FA, n = 127 and FB, n = 129) substantially decreased from baseline to study end in FA (291 ± 14 to 140 ± 8; –52%, P < .001), and FB (313 ± 14 to 153 ± 11, –51%, P < .001) with no difference between groups. Similarly, gassiness, spitting-up, vomiting and sleep pattern significantly improved by study end for both formulas. Mean ± SE IGSQ index scores significantly decreased from baseline to study end (FA: 44.5 ± 0.9 to 28.6 ± 0.7; FB: 44.5 ± 0.8 to 29.0 ± 0.7; P < .001) with no differences between groups. Infant temperament and maternal anxiety also improved significantly in both groups by study end. Conclusion: Switching from standard, full-lactose, intact whey/casein infant formulas to either study formula resulted in an improvement of gastrointestinal symptoms and associated behaviors in infants with signs of feeding intolerance. Trial Registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov , NCT02021058
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