Impact of zinc supplementation on persistent diarrhoea in malnourished Bangladeshi children

  • S. K. Roy
  • , A. M. Tomkins
  • , D. Mahalanabis
  • , S. M. Akramuzzaman
  • , R. Haider
  • , R. H. Behrens
  • , G. Fuchs

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

73 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

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 x 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 t 1.8 μmol 1-1, 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.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)1235-1239
Número de páginas5
PublicaciónActa Paediatrica, International Journal of Paediatrics
Volumen87
N.º12
DOI
EstadoPublished - dic 1998

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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