| Literature DB >> 18330060 |
Claudia Gutiérrez1, Sofía Villa, Felipe R Mota, Juan J Calva.
Abstract
This study assessed whether an oral rehydration solution (ORS) in which glucose is replaced by L-glutamine (L-glutamine ORS) is more effective than the standard glucose-based rehydration solution recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO-ORS) in reducing the stool volume and time to rehydrate in acute diarrhoea. In a double-blind, randomized controlled trial in a Mexican hospital, 147 dehydrated children, aged 1-60 month(s), were assigned either to the WHO-ORS (74 children), or to the L-glutamine ORS (73 children) and followed until successful rehydration. There were no significant differences between the groups in stool output during the first four hours, time to successful rehydration, volume of ORS required for rehydration, urinary output, and vomiting. This was independent of rotavirus-associated infection. An L-glutamine-containing glucose-free ORS seems not to offer greater clinical benefit than the standard WHO-ORS in mildly-to-moderately-dehydrated children with acute non-cholera diarrhoea.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18330060 PMCID: PMC2754026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Popul Nutr ISSN: 1606-0997 Impact factor: 2.000
Baseline characteristics of 147 enrolled children
| Variable | WHO-ORS (n=74) | L-glutamine ORS (n=73) | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median age (months) (minimum-maximum) | 11 (1–39) | 10 (2–34) | 0.63 |
| Male gender, no. (%) | 47 (63.5) | 43 (58.9) | 0.56 |
| Nutritional status, no. (%) | |||
| First-grade malnutrition | 41 (55.4) | 37 (50.6) | 0.16 |
| Second-grade malnutrition | 13 (17.6) | 9 (12.3) | |
| Percentage of dehydration | 4.3 (1–10.8) | 4.2 (2–10.2) | 0.59 |
| Time (hours) with diarrhoea before enrollment, median (minimum-maximum) | 37 (5–120) | 47 (10–120) | 0.16 |
| Total number of stools 24 hours before enrollment, median (minimum-maximum) | 8 (1–27) | 10 (2–30) | 0.053 |
| Total number of vomits 24 hours before enrollment, median (minimum-maximum) | 6 (0–23) | 6 (0–28) | 0.96 |
| Fever ≥38.0, no. (%) | 40 (56.8) | 47 (62.3) | 0.20 |
| Antibiotic use, no. (%) | 42 (56.8) | 44 (60.3) | 0.66 |
| Anti-diarrhoeic use, no. (%) | 18 (24.3) | 11 (15.0) | 0.16 |
| Use of hyperosmolar fluid, no. (%) | 8 (10.8) | 13 (17.8) | 0.22 |
| Reporting rotavirus in faeces, no. (%) | 35 (47.3) | 27 (37.0) | 0.20 |
| | 1 | 1 | 0.99 |
| | 0 | 2 | 0.15 |
| | 1 | 1 | 0.99 |
| | 0 | 1 | 0.31 |
| Serum sodium level, median (mEq/L) (minimum-maximum) | 140 (116–158) | 138 (116–158) | 0.24 |
| Serum glucose level, median (mg/dL) (minimum-maximum) | 92 (42–155) | 90 (59–180) | 0.59 |
| Urinary gravity, median (minimum-maximum) | 1,028 (1,025–1,030) | 1,027 (1,024–1,030) | 0.41 |
∗ Mann-Whitney U test;
† χ2 test;
‡ Weight at enrollment × 100/weight at end of rehydration ORS=Oral rehydration solution; WHO=World Health Organization
Main outcomes in children receiving two different oral rehydration solutions in the management of acute diarrhoea
| Variable | WHO-ORS (n=74) | L-glutamine ORS (n=73) | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time (hours) required for rehydration, median (minimum–maximum) | 6 (3–12) | 5 (3–15) | 0.34 |
| Volume of ORS required for rehydration | 24 (11–39) | 24 (15–44) | 0.72 |
| Stool output during the time to rehydration | 11.35 (0–28.7) | 11.8 (0.9–33.8) | 0.80 |
| Urinary output during the time to rehydration | 0.6 (0–4.9) | 0.8 (0–6.6) | 0.12 |
| Patients with vomits, no. (%); median of vomits | 17 (22.9) | 23 (31.5) | 0.24 |
| No./hour (minimum–maximum) | 0 (0–15) | 0 (0–1) | 0.08 |
| Median of vomits/hour | 0 (0–13.2) | 0 (0–9.1) | 0.17 |
| Diagnosis of osmotic diarrhoea¶, no. (%) | 37 (52.0) | 24 (40.0) | 0.16 |
∗ Mann-Whitney U test;
† χ2 test;
‡ (mL/kg/h); ¶Defined as when the osmolality of (Na faecal ⩲ K faecal × 2) faeces was ≥100
ORS=Oral rehydration solution; WHO=World Health Organization