Abstract
Background
Severely malnourished children aged under five years requiring hospital admission for diarrheal illness frequently develop ileus during hospitalization with often fatal outcomes. However, there is no data on risk factors and outcome of ileus in such children. We intended to evaluate predictive factors for ileus during hospitalization and their outcomes.
Methodology/Principal findings
This was a retrospective chart review that enrolled severely malnourished children under five years old with diarrhea, admitted to the Dhaka Hospital of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh between April 2011 and August 2012. We used electronic database to have our chart abstraction from previously admitted children in the hospital. The clinical and laboratory characteristics of children with (cases = 45), and without ileus (controls = 261) were compared. Cases were first identified by observation of abnormal bowel sounds on physical examination and confirmed with abdominal radiographs. For this comparison, Chi-square test was used to measure the difference in proportion, Student’s t-test to calculate the difference in mean for normally distributed data and Mann-Whitney test for data that were not normally distributed. Finally, in identifying independent risk factors for ileus, logistical regression analysis was performed. Ileus was defined if a child developed abdominal distension and had hyperactive or sluggish or absent bowel sound and a radiologic evidence of abdominal gas-fluid level during hospitalization. Logistic regression analysis adjusting for potential confounders revealed that the independent risk factors for admission for ileus were reluctance to feed (odds ratio [OR] = 3.22, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.24–8.39, p = 0.02), septic shock (OR = 3.62, 95% CI = 1.247–8.95, p<0.01), and hypokalemia (OR = 1.99, 95% CI = 1.03–3.86, p = 0.04). Mortality was significantly higher in cases compared to controls (22% vs. 8%, p<0.01) in univariate analysis; however, in multivariable regression analysis, after adjusting for potential confounders such as septic shock, no association was found between ileus and death (OR = 2.05, 95% CI = 0.68–6.14, p = 0.20). In a separate regression analysis model, after adjusting for potential confounders such as ileus, reluctance to feed, hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, and blood transfusion, septic shock (OR = 168.84, 95% CI = 19.27–1479.17, p<0.01) emerged as the only independent predictor of death in severely malnourished diarrheal children.
Conclusions/Significance
This study suggests that the identification of simple independent admission risk factors for ileus and risk factors for death in hospitalized severely malnourished diarrheal children may prompt clinicians to be more vigilant in managing these conditions, especially in resource-limited settings in order to decrease ileus and ileus-related fatal outcomes in such children.
Childhood malnutrition and diarrhea are important problems in lower and middle-income countries, including Bangladesh. Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) and diarrhea are responsible for more than one third of all deaths in children below five years old globally. Most of these deaths occur because of complications of SAM and/or diarrhea. SAM and diarrhea may simultaneously present in a child, often with serious complications. Ileus is a common fatal complication in such hospitalized children, and is accompanied by abdominal distension and hyperactive, sluggish, or absent bowel sounds heard using a stethoscope. Ileus is confirmed by radiologic evidence of multiple gas-fluid levels in the abdomen. However, the underlying factors contributing to ileus and its management in diarrheal children with severe acute malnutrition is unknown. Our study aimed to ascertain these risk factors and the outcome of ileus in such children by reviewing the data of previously admitted children between April 2011 and August 2012. Of 306 severely malnourished Bangladeshi under-five-year-old children with diarrhea enrolled for 17 months, 45 had ileus. Ileus was independently associated with a reluctance to feed, septic shock, and hypokalemia and had a higher case-fatality rate compared to those without ileus.
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