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      Diarrhoea in jaundiced neonates treated with phototherapy: role of intestinal secretion.

      1 , , , ,
      Archives of disease in childhood
      BMJ

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          Abstract

          Thirty jaundiced neonates with diarrhoea who were being treated with phototherapy and 30 matched control infants were studied to try and find out the cause of the diarrhoea. Faecal osmolality and electrolyte concentrations were measured, which gave clear evidence that the diarrhoea arose from intestinal secretion. Rectal water and electrolyte absorption in 10 jaundiced infants receiving phototherapy, in 10 jaundiced infants not receiving phototherapy, and in 10 healthy controls was measured with a rectal dialysis bag. A further group of eight jaundiced infants was also studied both during and after phototherapy to document the reversal of ion transport changes. Absorption of water, sodium chloride, and potassium was significantly impaired in the patients receiving phototherapy compared with each of the control groups. Such impairment was transient, as it was not apparent when the jaundice faded and phototherapy was stopped. These data show that the colon plays a part in the pathogenesis of secretory diarrhoea and that both hyperbilirubinaemia and phototherapy are necessary for such an effect to develop.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Arch Dis Child
          Archives of disease in childhood
          BMJ
          1468-2044
          0003-9888
          Aug 1989
          : 64
          : 8
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Paediatrics, Second School of Medicine, University of Naples, Italy.
          Article
          10.1136/adc.64.8.1161
          1792534
          2782930
          add5b0b7-8c7f-4edb-83b6-29775792fb12
          History

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