Dietary Supplementation With Medium-Chain Triglycerides Reduces Candida Gastrointestinal Colonization in Preterm InfantsPediatric Infectious Disease Journal - Tập 38 Số 2 - Trang 164-168 - 2019
Amanda B. Arsenault, Kearney T. W. Gunsalus, Sonia S. Laforce‐Nesbitt, Lynn Przystac, Erik J. DeAngelis, Michaela E. Hurley, Ethan S. Vorel, Richard Tucker, Nirupa R. Matthan, Alice H. Lichtenstein, Carol A. Kumamoto, Joseph M. Bliss
Background:
Candida is an important cause of infections in premature infants. Gastrointestinal colonization with Candida is a common site of entry for disseminated disease. The objective of this study was to determine whether a dietary supplement of medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) reduces Candida colonization in preterm infants.
Methods:
Preterm infants with Candida colonization (n = 12) receiving enteral feedings of either infant formula (n = 5) or breast milk (n = 7) were randomized to MCT supplementation (n = 8) or no supplementation (n = 4). Daily stool samples were collected to determine fungal burden during a 3-week study period. Infants in the MCT group received supplementation during 1 week of the study period. The primary outcome was fungal burden during the supplementation period as compared with the periods before and after supplementation.
Results:
Supplementation of MCT led to a marked increase in MCT intake relative to unsupplemented breast milk or formula as measured by capric acid content. In the treatment group, there was a significant reduction in fungal burden during the supplementation period as compared with the period before supplementation (rate ratio, 0.15; P = 0.02), with a significant increase after supplementation was stopped (rate ratio, 61; P < 0.001). Fungal burden in the control group did not show similar changes.
Conclusions:
Dietary supplementation with MCT may be an effective method to reduce Candida colonization in preterm infants.
Effect of Social Distancing Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Incidence of Viral Respiratory Tract Infections in Children in Finland During Early 2020Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal - Tập 39 Số 12 - Trang e423-e427 - 2020
Ilari Kuitunen, Miia Artama, Lotta Mäkelä, Katri Backman, Tarja Heiskanen‐Kosma, Marjo Renko
Background:
Social distancing measures are used to reduce the spreading of infection. Our aim was to assess the immediate effects of national lockdown orders due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on pediatric emergency room (ER) visits and respiratory tract infections in hospitals and nationwide in Finland.
Methods:
This register-based study used hospital patient information systems and the Finnish national infectious disease register. The participants were all patients visiting pediatric ER in 2 Finnish hospitals (Kuopio University Hospital, Mikkeli Central Hospital) covering 1/5th of the Finnish children population, 4 weeks before and 4 weeks after the start of the nationwide lockdown on March 16, 2020. Nationwide weekly numbers of influenza (A + B) and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in children were assessed from the infectious disease register from 2015 to 2020.
Results:
A major decrease in the rate of daily median pediatric ER visits was detected in both hospitals in the study during the nationwide lockdown compared with the study period before the lockdown (Mikkeli, 19 vs. 7, P < 0.001; Kuopio, 9 vs. 2,5, P < 0.001). The influenza season was shorter (8 weeks from peak to no cases), and the weekly rate of new cases decreased faster compared with the previous 4 influenza seasons (previously 15–20 weeks from peak to no cases). A similar decrease was also seen in RSV cases. No pediatric cases of COVID-19 were found in participating hospitals during the study period.
Conclusion:
These results strongly suggest that social distancing and other lockdown strategies are effective to slow down the spreading of common respiratory viral diseases and decreasing the need for hospitalization among children.
Real-Time Surveillance to Assess Risk of Intussusception and Other Adverse Events After Pentavalent, Bovine-Derived Rotavirus VaccinePediatric Infectious Disease Journal - Tập 29 Số 1 - Trang 1-5 - 2010
Edward A. Belongia, Stephanie A. Irving, Irene M. Shui, Martin Kulldorff, Edwin Lewis, Ruihua Yin, Tracy A. Lieu, Eric Weintraub, W. Katherine Yih, Rong Li, James Baggs