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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-174239

ABSTRACT

An 11 months 22 days old girl presented with a history of watery diarrhoea since birth, failure to thrive, and developmental delay. Her diagnosis was congenital chloride diarrhoea (CCD) with raised level of chloride (>90 mmol/L) in stool in the absence of cystic fibrosis. Management of CCD included replacement of NaCl, KCl, and correction of dehydration. Diarrhoea of the patient was resolved with Captopril, which was initially provided to the patient for managing heart failure. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of CCD that shows the beneficial effect of Captopril. Therefore, we suggest that further study is warranted as to the potential for Captopril as additional option in the treatment for CCD. We present this case report with the informed consent of the patient’s guardian.

2.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-173985

ABSTRACT

A one month and twenty-five days old baby girl with problems of acute watery diarrhoea, severe dehydration, severe malnutrition, and reduced activity was admitted to the gastrointestinal unit of Dhaka Hospital of icddr,b. The differentials included dehydration, dyselectrolytaemia and severe sepsis. She was treated following the protocolized management guidelines of the hospital. However, within the next 24 hours, the patient deteriorated with additional problems of severe sepsis, severe pneumonia, hypoxaemia, ileus, and sclerema. She was transferred to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). In the ICU, she was managed with oxygen supplementation, intravenous antibiotics, intravenous fluid, including a number of blood transfusions, vitamins, minerals, and diet. One month prior to this admission, she had been admitted to the ICU also with sclerema, septic shock, and urinary tract infection due to Escherichia coli and was discharged after full recovery. On both the occasions, she required repeated blood transfusions and aggressive antibiotic therapy in addition to appropriate fluid therapy and oxygen supplementation. She fully recovered from severe sepsis, severe malnutrition, ileus, sclerema, and pneumonia, both clinically and radiologically and was discharged two weeks after admission. Consecutive episodes of sclerema, resulting in two successive hospitalizations in a severely-malnourished young septic infant, have never been reported. However, this was managed successfully with blood transfusion, broad-spectrum antibiotics, and correction of electrolyte imbalance.

3.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-173979

ABSTRACT

Presentation of pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) as acute pneumonia in severely-malnourished and HIVpositive children has received very little attention, although this is very important in the management of pneumonia in children living in communities where TB is highly endemic. Our aim was to identify confirmed TB in children with acute pneumonia and HIV infection and/or severe acute malnutrition (SAM) (weight-for-length/height or weight-for-age z score <-3 of the WHO median, or presence of nutritional oedema). We conducted a literature search, using PubMed and Web of Science in April 2013 for the period from January 1974 through April 2013. We included only those studies that reported confirmed TB identified by acid fast bacilli (AFB) through smear microscopy, or by culture-positive specimens from children with acute pneumonia and SAM and/or HIV infection. The specimens were collected either from induced sputum (IS), or gastric lavage (GL), or broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL), or percutaneous lung aspirates (LA). Pneumonia was defined as the radiological evidence of lobar or patchy consolidation and/or clinical evidence of severe/ very severe pneumonia according to the WHO criteria of acute respiratory infection. A total of 17 studies met our search criteria but 6 were relevant for our review. Eleven studies were excluded as those did not assess the HIV status of the children or specify the nutritional status of the children with acute pneumonia and TB. We identified only 747 under-five children from the six relevant studies that determined a tubercular aetiology of acute pneumonia in children with SAM and/or positive HIV status. Three studies were reported from South Africa and one each from the Gambia, Ethiopia, and Thailand where 610, 90, 35, and 12 children were enrolled and 64 (10%), 23 (26%), 5 (14%), and 1 (8%) children were identified with active TB respectively, with a total of 93 (12%) children with active TB. Among 610 HIV-infected children in three studies from South Africa and 137 SAM children from other studies, 64 (10%) and 29 (21%) isolates of M. tuberculosis were identified respectively. Children from South Africa were infected with HIV without specification of their nutritional status whereas children from other countries had SAM but without indication of their HIV status. Our review of the existing data suggests that pulmonary tuberculosis may be more common than it is generally suspected in children with acute pneumonia and SAM, or HIV infection. Because of the scarcity of data, there is an urgent need to investigate PTB as one of the potential aetiologies of acute pneumonia in these children in a carefully-conducted larger study, especially outside Africa.

4.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-153208

ABSTRACT

Aim: There is lack of information on the severity of diarrheal disease with etiology. Thus the study aimed to compare the etiology of under-five children with moderate-to-severe disease (MSD) and mild disease (MD). Study Design: Diarrheal disease surveillance. Place and Duration of Study: Mirzapur Kumudini Hospital, Tangail, rural Bangladesh, January 2010 – December 2011. Methodology: Overall, 2,324 under-5 diarrhea children were enrolled in the hospital who came from the demographic surveillance system (DSS) catchment area. Whole stool samples were collected from each enrolled child to detect rotavirus, Shigella, ETEC and V. cholerae. Information on socio-demographic and clinical characteristics was also collected. Results: Among all the study children, 1,098 (47%) were aged 0-11 months; 789 (34%) were 12-23 months, and 437 (19%) were 24-59 months. Rotavirus (33%) was mainly responsible for diarrhea amongst children under-5 and 90% of them were less than 2 years. Shigella represented 14%; of which, 45% were 24-59 months old. However, ETEC and V. cholerae represented only 3% and 2% respectively. Shigella was the most commonly detected pathogen (27%) for MSD followed by rotavirus (16%). Conversely, rotavirus (43%) was responsible for MD. MSD were most likely to be infected with Shigella flexneri [OR-9.81; 95% CI (6.38, 15.18)] and Shigella sonnei [6.29; (3.67, 10.87)] compared to their counterparts with MD. In logistic regression analysis, Shigella was responsible for a 2.25 times higher risk for MSD. Children with Shigella were 3.28 times at higher risk for bloody stool and 2.45 times more likely to have fever. However, rotavirus diarrhea was more likely to be presented with vomiting (OR-2.46) and fever (OR-1.28), and Vibrio cholerae, most often with watery diarrhea (OR-4.35). None of the clinical features were significantly associated with ETEC. Conclusion: Shigella was the leading pathogen that was detected most often in MSD, whereas rotavirus was often associated with MD.

5.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-173847

ABSTRACT

The study evaluated the commonly-used drugs for the management of sepsis and their outcome among under-five children. We evaluated the hospital-records of all paediatric sepsis patients (n= 183) in the intensive care unit (ICU) and longer-stay unit (LSU) of the Dhaka Hospital of icddr,b. These records were collected from the hospital management system (SHEBA) during November 2009 to October 2010. A total of 183 under-five children with clinical sepsis were found during the study period, and 14 (8%) of them were neonates. One hundred and eighty-one patients had received a combination of injection ampicilin and injection gentamicin, and two patients had received the combination of injection ceftriaxone and injection gentamicin. Only 46 (25%) patients required a change of antibiotics to the combination of intravenous ceftriaxone plus gentamicin after non-response of injection ampicilin and injection gentamicin combination; 7/181 (4%) patients died who received injection ampicilin and injection gentamicin whereas none died among the other two patients who received injection ceftriaxone and injection gentamicin (p=1.00). The combination of injection ampicilin and injection gentamicin as the first-line antibiotics for the management of sepsis in children even beyond the neonatal age is very effective, resulting in lower mortality.

6.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-173819

ABSTRACT

Phosphorus is an essential substance in our body, and hypophosphataemia (HP) is well-described in rickets, refeeding syndrome, diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), and in chronic alcohol-abuse. However, to our knowledge, HP among severely-malnourished children has not been studied in detail, and information on prevalence, severity, and treatment is scarce. Currently, there are only a few published case reports of HP. This case series describes three cases of HP that presented to Dhaka Hospital of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b). Our first case required mechanical ventilation for respiratory distress associated with severe hypokalaemia (K 1.1 mmol/L) and moderate hypophosphataemia (P 2.1 mg/dL). The second case presented with severe sepsis which was associated with symptomatic hypocalcaemia (Ca 1.68 mmol/L), hypokalaemia (K 1.82 mmol/L), and severe hypophosphataemia (P 0.9 mg/dL). The third case presented with pneumonia and sepsis which were complicated by hypokalaemia (K 2.05 mmol/L) and severe hypophosphataemia (P 1.1 mg/dL). Marked lethargy and severe hypotonia were associated with HP in all of these cases. Manifestations of HP are diverse and can occur in association with other electrolyte imbalances, especially among malnourished children. Malnutrition, combined with sepsis, is one of the major killers of children younger than 5 years of age, and both malnutrition and sepsis can cause HP. It is concluded that the underlying causes of morbidity, including HP, should be actively sought and treated to reduce the mortality of children aged below five years.

7.
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health ; 2008 Jul; 39(4): 719-27
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-32890

ABSTRACT

We compared the socio-demographic and clinical outcomes as predictors in severely ill hospitalized under-five diarrheal children with and without pneumonia. We studied 496 under-five children with diarrhea admitted to the Special Care Ward (SCW) of Dhaka Hospital of International Center for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh from 1999 to 2004. Children with pneumonia, in addition to their diarrhea, constituted the study group (cases), and those who did not have pneumonia constituted the comparison (control) group. The individual predictors of pneumonia in children were a history of cough (OR 2.19, 95% CI 1.30-3.72, p=0.002), fever (OR 1.73, 95% CI 1.19-2.53, p=0.003), and rapid breathing (OR 2.45, 95% CI 1.49-4.03, p<0.001). Hypothermia (6% vs 2%; p=0.02), hyponatremia (41% vs 27%; p=0.003) and dehydrating diarrhea (81% vs 69%, p=0.003) were more frequent in control children. On logistic regression analyses, the case fatality among children with pneumonia was nearly two times (OR, 1.88 CI, 1.12-3.15, p= 0.02) than that of controls. Formulation of guidelines and implementation of a more comprehensive approach to managing pneumonia among severely ill diarrheal children is necessary to reduce childhood deaths in Bangladesh.


Subject(s)
Analysis of Variance , Bangladesh/epidemiology , Case-Control Studies , Child, Preschool , Comorbidity , Diarrhea/complications , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Infections/complications , Logistic Models , Male , Pneumonia/complications , Prognosis , Risk Assessment , Severity of Illness Index
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