The interrelationship between diarrhea, malnutrition, and small bowel integrity was investigated prospectively in 68 Gambian infants aged 0-18 mo. Profiles of growth and morbidity were recorded for 8 mo. Each month intestinal permeability was measured by the differential uptake of orally administered lactulose (L) and mannitol (M). In well infants the mean L:M ratio was 0.42 (range 0.11-1.42). This ratio was increased slightly for underweight (60-80% wt for age) infants (mean 0.52) but considerably for those with marasmus (less than 60% wt for age) (mean 1.3, p less than 0.001), for those with acute or chronic diarrhea (mean 1.0 and 2.85, respectively; p less than 0.001), or with measles (mean 1.4, p less than 0.001). Sequential studies of ward patients with malnutrition and diarrhea showed a rapid fall in L:M ratios with resolution of diarrhea. These studies suggest that damage to the small intestine may play an important part in the development of infant malnutrition in The Gambia.
To evaluate the impact of zinc supplementation on the clinical recovery and body weight of children with persistent diarrhoea, a randomized, double‐blind, controlled trial was conducted in 190 children with persistent diarrhoea aged between 3 and 24 months. Children were randomly allocated to receive either zinc (20 mg d−1) syrup with multivitamin (2 × RDA) or multivitamin alone in three divided daily doses for 2 weeks. The trial was conducted in a diarrhoeal disease hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Duration until clinical recovery (d), impact on body weight and serum zinc level after 2 weeks of zinc supplementation were recorded. The duration of illness was significantly reduced (33%) with zinc supplementation among children who were underweight (≤70% wt/age, p= 0:03). Supplemented male children also had a significant reduction (27%) in duration for recovery compared with unsupplemented children (p= 0:05). From baseline to convalescence, zinc‐supplemented children maintained their serum zinc concentration (13.4 vs 13.6/μmol l−1), whereas unsupplemented children had a decrease in serum zinc after the 2 weeks of diarrhoea (13.6 vs 11.8 μmol l−1, p < 0:03). The mean body weight of the children in the supplemented group was maintained (5.72 vs 5.70 kg, p= 0:62) during hospitalization, unlike that of the control group, in which there was a reduction in body weight (5.75 vs 5.67 kg, p= 0:05). Five children in the unsupplemented group and one child in the zinc‐supplemented group died during the 2 weeks of supplementation (p= 0:06). Zinc supplementation in persistent diarrhoea significantly reduced the length of the recovery period in malnourished children and prevented a fall in body weight and serum zinc concentration, indicating that zinc is a beneficial therapeutic strategy in this high‐risk childhood illness.
The development of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) has resulted in clear and practical methods for replacing fluid and electrolyte losses during diarrhoea. Rehydration salts can be provided in 3 ways; a pre-packed, easy to use, package which requires controlled formulation and distribution, a cereal-based formula from widely available ingredients which require preparation and cooking, or a home-made recipe of sugar with salt, which is relatively easily prepared. Poor retention of knowledge on the correct way to prepare solutions, inadequate availability of ingredients and practical problems of home production are major problems in ORT programmes. Although ORT may be life saving in severe dehydrating diarrhoea, it may not have an impact on milder illness, dysentery or persistent diarrhoea. Breast feeding is a natural and effective method for preventing and reducing diarrhoeal morbidity and its role needs repeated promotion. Early feeding in diarrhoea reduces duration, severity and adverse nutritional sequelae. The benefit of vitamin A and folic acid supplements are as yet unproved; zinc may have a role in aiding recovery of malnourished children. Drug treatment should be limited to parasitic gut infections, cholera or dysenteric disease. Widespread prescribing of drugs for diarrhoea by health workers may be hindering the success of ORT.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.