From foodconsumer.org
Zinc Could Saves Lives of Children With Diarrhea
By news release
Jul 31, 2008 - 7:41:39 AM
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An estimated 2 million children in developing countries die each
year from diarrhea, but simple zinc treatment could reduce the risk of
such deaths.
Researchers reached this conclusion in a new review of studies involving more than 6,000 children of all ages.
“Our
most important finding is that there is strong evidence that zinc
supplementation benefits children suffering from diarrhea in developing
countries, but only in infants over six months old,” said lead
investigator Marzia Lazzerini, M.D. “Zinc reduces acute diarrhea
duration in terms of mean duration and risk of diarrhea at given days.
Zinc also reduces the duration of persistent diarrhea.”
Nearly
30 percent of children in the world are zinc deficient, Lazzerini said.
She is a pediatrician with the World Health Organization (WHO)
Collaborating Centre for Maternal and Child Health in Trieste, Italy.
Zinc
deficiency is due primarily to inadequate dietary intake. Relatively
expensive foods — such as meat and fish—contain high levels of zinc,
the authors say. Although zinc also appears in cheap foods such as
nuts, seeds, legumes and whole grain cereal, these foods can reduce
absorption of zinc by the body. Zinc cannot be stored in the body.
“The
addition of zinc to children in developing countries is rational and
appropriate,” said William Cochran, M.D., who had no affiliation with
the review. “Diarrhea is a contributing factor to the death of millions
of children every year throughout the world. It contributes to death in
children in the U.S. much less frequently, 100 to 500 [cases] per
year,” said Cochran, a pediatric gastroenterologist and nutritionist
and chair of the Department of Pediatrics at the Geisinger Clinic in
Danville, PA.
The review appears in the current issue of The
Cochrane Library,
a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international
organization that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw
evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering
both the content and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.
The
reviewers identified 18 randomized controlled trials enrolling 6,165
children and comparing zinc treatment with placebo. Thirteen trials
focused on treatment of acute diarrhea and the other five on treatment
of persistent diarrhea.
The reviewers found zinc was effective
for diarrhea in children over six months old. By the third day of zinc
treatment, children were 31 percent less likely to suffer from acute
diarrhea (in two studies) and were 45 percent less likely to do so
after five days of treatment (also in two studies), Lazzerini said.
“This
benefit withstood extensive subgroup analysis for nutritional status,
geographic region, background zinc deficiency, zinc type and study
setting,” the authors say.
Zinc also reduced diarrhea at by 29
percent after a week of treatment. Diarrhea at day seven can be a
signal of persistent diarrhea, which can lead to severe dehydration and
death.
Two of the studies included children younger than six
months. The results showed no evidence of a therapeutic effect of zinc
treatment in these children.
The authors said there were
insufficient data to gauge the influence of zinc treatment on death,
since the studies under review did not measure mortality. “The trials
were not designed to look at hospitalization and mortality, but given
these results, it’s expected that a policy of zinc supplementation to
all children over six months with diarrhea in developing countries
could also reduce hospitalization rate and mortality,” they concluded.
“Anything
that can be done to limit diarrhea and, as a result, not limit the
consumption of regular food may be of help in improving the high death
rate associated with diarrhea in underdeveloped countries,” Cochran
said.
Lazzerini
M, Ronfani L. Oral zinc for treating diarrhoea in children (Review).
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 3.
The
Cochrane Collaboration is an international nonprofit, independent
organization that produces and disseminates systematic reviews of
health care interventions and promotes the search for evidence in the
form of clinical trials and other studies of interventions. Visit http://www.cochrane.org for more information.