We describe a patient with a novel missense mutation in LRBA who presented with IBD-like symptoms at early age, illustrating that LRBA deficiency should be considered in the differential diagnosis for IBD(-like) disease even in the absence of overt immunodeficiency.
We sought to explore the relationship between Helicobacter pylori infection and serum ferritin, vitamin B(12), folate, and zinc status among children. Fifty patients aged 5-18 years who underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy because of dyspeptic symptoms, were studied, prospectively. Patients were grouped as H. pylori positive (group 1, n=32) or H. pylori negative (group 2, n=18) by histopathologic examination and rapid urease test. Fasting serum ferritin, vitamin B(12), folate, and zinc levels of patients were measured. Both groups were indifferent according to age, gender, height standard deviation score (H(SDS)), and weight standard deviation score (W(SDS)). Serum ferritin levels were 33+/-26 and 50+/-46 ng/mL (P=.098), vitamin B(12) levels were 303+/-135 and 393+/-166 pg/mL (P=.042), folate levels were 9.64+/-3.2 and 9.61+/-2.8 ng/mL (P=.979), and zinc levels were 95+/-48 and 87+/-31 mug/dL (P=.538), in groups 1 and 2, respectively. Ferritin levels of 14 (43.8%) patients in group 1 and 6 (33.3%) patients in group 2 were below the normal range (P=.470). Serum vitamin B(12) levels of 9 children (28%) in group 1 and 2 children (11%) in group 2 were below the normal range (P=.287). The findings of the present study suggest that H. pylori infection has a negative effect on serum ferritin and vitamin B(12) levels in children. This negative effect on vitamin B(12) levels is rather marked in contrast to that on ferritin levels. H. pylori infection has no significant effect on serum folate or zinc levels among children.
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.
A 4-year-old Turkish girl was referred to our hospital with the findings of encephalopathy and pancytopenia. She had a history of severe abdominal cramps and gastrointestinal bleeding. A confused state, muscle pain and weakness, erythema-bullous and erythema-nodosum-like skin lesions, and alopecia were observed at her hospitalization. All of these symptoms resolved on follow-up. On laboratory investigation severe thrombocytopenia and leukopenia, mild anemia, a moderate increase in aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase levels were detected. After reevaluating her medical history, it was learned that she had accidentally taken 1.3 to 1.5 mg/kg of colchicine 3 to 4 days before her first hospitalization. The possibility of misdiagnosis of colchicine intoxication should be borne in mind, and pediatricians must be aware of its toxic effects, especially in areas where patients with familial Mediterranean fever are present.
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