Efficacy of drugs for the acute treatment of migraine in children has not so far been studied in well controlled trials. We conducted a study to evaluate the efficacy of acetaminophen and ibuprofen. Eighty-eight children, aged 4.0 to 15.8 years, with migraine participated in a double-blind crossover study. Three attacks per child were treated in random order with single oral doses of 15 mg/kg acetaminophen, 10 mg/kg ibuprofen, and placebo at home. The primary end point, reduction in severe or moderate headache (grade > or = 3 on a scale of 1 to 5) by at least two grades after 2 hours, was reached twice as often with acetaminophen and three times as often with ibuprofen as with placebo. Ibuprofen was twice as likely as acetaminophen to abort migraine within 2 hours. In the intent-to-treat analysis, children improved twice as often with ibuprofen and acetaminophen as with placebo. Both ibuprofen and acetaminophen are effective and economical treatments for severe or moderate migraine attacks in children. Ibuprofen gave the best relief.
Fluconazole is being increasingly used to prevent and treat invasive candidiasis in neonates, yet dosing is largely empirical due to the lack of adequate pharmacokinetic (PK) data. We performed a multicenter population PK study of fluconazole in 23-to 40-week-gestation infants less than 120 days of age. We developed a population PK model using nonlinear mixed effect modeling (NONMEM) with the NONMEM algorithm. Covariate effects were predefined and evaluated based on estimation precision and clinical significance. We studied fluconazole PK in 55 infants who at enrollment had a median (
Although much still needs to be done, it's clear that with concerted efforts and appropriate resources, change is possible but slow. Retaining and fostering public and political interest in paediatric medicines is challenging, but pivotal for success.
At present there is no evidence showing that gastric lavage should be used routinely in the management of poisonings. Further, the evidence supporting gastric lavage as a beneficial treatment in special situations is weak, as is the evidence to exclude benefit in all cases. Gastric lavage should not be performed routinely, if at all, for the treatment of poisoned patients. In the rare instances in which gastric lavage is indicated, it should only be performed by individuals with proper training and expertise.
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