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The Diagnosis of Infantile Beriberi and Lao infants with Vitamin B1 Deficiency without Apparent Signs / Lao Medical Journal
Lao Medical Journal ; : 9-14, 2011.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-625104
ABSTRACT
Beriberi (vitamin B1 or thiamin deficiency) is neglected health problem that probably remains as a significant cause of mortality among infants in Asia. There has been very little research in the last 4 decades. Although there are few data from Laos, the clinical experience of Lao pediatricians, along with some data from Mahosot Hospital in Vientiane, suggests that beriberi is probably an important cause of infant mortality, which is currently very high in Laos. Diagnosis of infantile beriberi can be clinically if signs are evident. However, a significant number of infants may have clinical unapparent vitamin B1 deficiency, complicating their illness, which is impossible to diagnose unless biochemical assays are performed. Unapparent vitamin B1 deficiency may complicate the illness of infants presenting with other diseases and supplementary treatment with vitamin B1 could potentially improve their outcome and reduce infant mortality. Two recently published papers by the Wellcome Trust – Mahosot Hospital – Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Collaboration suggested that approximately 13% of Lao sick infants admitted with diarrhea, pneumonia and sepsis (without clinical evidence of beriberi) at the Pediatric Wards, Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane had evidence of biochemical vitamin B1 deficiency particularly among those aged > 2 months. Infants with biochemical vitamin B1 deficiency had higher mortality than those who were not B1 deficient. The study also demonstrated that the activation coefficient (α), which has been used to diagnose vitamin B1 among adults living in non¬rice eating societies, cannot be reliably used for the diagnosis of vitamin B1 deficiency in infants, that basal ETK < 0.59 micromoles/min/gHb is a better biochemical marker of infantile beriberi, and that detection of the cardiac dysfunction marker troponin T may be useful indicator of infantile beriberi. The implication of the findings in these two papers were that (i) since clinical unapparent vitamin B1 deficiency is common among Lao sick infants, co¬treatment with vitamin B1 may reduce disease severity and mortality, (ii) since basal ETK is more accurate than activation coefficient (α) in the diagnosis of infantile beriberi, basal ETK should be used for the diagnosis of vitamin B1 deficiency among infants, and (iii) since troponin T may be useful in the diagnosis of infantile beriberi and as this assay is now available as a bedside test these should be evaluated as accessible markers.

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Type of study: Diagnostic study Language: English Journal: Lao Medical Journal Year: 2011 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Type of study: Diagnostic study Language: English Journal: Lao Medical Journal Year: 2011 Type: Article