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Single dose vitamin A treatment in acute shigellosis in Bangladesh children:
randomised double blind controlled trial.
Hossain S; Biswas R; Kabir I; Sarker S; Dibley M; Fuchs G; Mahalanabis
D
BMJ 1998 Feb 7;316(7129):422-6 OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy
of a single large oral dose of vitamin A in treating acute shigellosis
in children in Bangladesh. DESIGN: Randomised double blind controlled
clinical trial. SETTING: Dhaka Hospital, International Centre for Diarrhoeal
Disease Research, Bangladesh. SUBJECTS: 83 children aged 1-7 years with
bacteriologically proved shigellosis but no clinical signs of vitamin
A deficiency; 42 were randomised to treatment with vitamin A and 41 formed
a control group. INTERVENTION: Children were given a single oral dose
of 200,000 IU of vitamin A plus 25 IU vitamin E or a control preparation
of 25 IU vitamin E. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical cure on study day
5 and bacteriological cure. RESULTS: Baseline characteristics of the subjects
in the two treatment groups were similar. Significantly more children
in the vitamin A group than in the control group achieved clinical cure
(19/42 (45%) v 8/14 (20%); chi 2 = 5.14, 1 df, P = 0.02; risk ratio =
0.68 (95% confidence interval; 0.50 to 0.93)). When cure was determined
bacteriologically, the groups had similar rates (16/42 (38%) v 16/41 (39%);
chi 2 = 0.02, 1 df, P = 0.89; risk ratio = 0.98 (0.70 to 1.39)). CONCLUSIONS:
Vitamin A reduces the severity of acute shigellosis in children
living in areas where vitamin A deficiency is a major public health problem.
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