Lactose-free milk for infants with acute gastroenteritis in a developing country: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

BioMed Central Ltd.

Abstract

Background: Acute gastroenteritis is a major cause of pediatric morbidity and mortality, accounting for 15% of all childhood deaths worldwide. In developing countries, diarrheal diseases continue to be a major public health burden. Evidence from developed countries suggests that intake of lactose-free milk during diarrheal episodes may reduce the duration of the illness in pediatric inpatients. It is unknown whether lactose-free milk reduces the severity or duration of acute gastroenteritis in infants treated in outpatient settings in developing countries where diarrhea is more severe, and results in higher morbidities and mortalities. We hypothesize that lactose-free milk intake during acute gastroenteritis would significantly decrease the duration and severity of diarrhea in infants presenting to the Emergency Department (ED), as compared with lactose-containing milk. Methods/Design: An open-label randomized clinical trial. Study population: 40 infants with acute gastroenteritis, age between 2 and 12months, presenting to the ED, will be randomized to control or intervention group. Intervention: Lactose-free milk, whereas the control group will continue on regular infant formula for a total of 7days. Infants will be followed up for 7days. Outcome measures: Diarrhea duration, weight loss, illness clinic visits, hospitalization rate, parental satisfaction, and time to symptom resolution. Statistical analysis: Descriptive and regression analysis will be conducted under the intention-to-treat basis by using SPSS version 21. Discussion: Acute gastroenteritis is a public health burden for developing countries, with a significant impact on infant morbidity and mortality. Provision of infant formula that may reduce the duration and severity of diarrhea can decrease this burden in countries with limited healthcare resources, like Lebanon. The findings from this study are anticipated to provide evidence-based dietary recommendations for ambulatory infants with acute diarrhea in developing countries. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02246010; September 2014. © 2015 Nabulsi et al.

Description

Keywords

Acute gastroenteritis, Developing world, Lactose-free milk, Acute disease, Age factors, Clinical protocols, Developing countries, Diarrhea, infantile, Gastroenteritis, Humans, Infant, Infant formula, Intention to treat analysis, Lactose, Lebanon, Milk substitutes, Research design, Risk factors, Severity of illness index, Time factors, Treatment outcome, Ambulatory care, Article, Artificial milk, Clinical article, Clinical protocol, Controlled study, Developing country, Diarrhea, Disease duration, Disease severity, Emergency ward, Follow up, Human, Infant disease, Lactose free milk, Liquid feces, Milk, Morbidity, Patient satisfaction, Randomized controlled trial, Weight reduction, Age, Diet therapy, Methodology, Milk substitute, Risk factor, Time factor

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By