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Sacrosidase Trial in Chronic Nonspecific Diarrhea in Children
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Sacrosidase Trial in Chronic Nonspecific Diarrhea in Children

Riad M. Rahhal and Warren P. Bishop
The open pediatric medicine journal, Vol.2(1), pp.35-38
10/30/2008
DOI: 10.2174/1874309900802010035
url
https://doi.org/10.2174/1874309900802010035View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

Chronic nonspecific diarrhea in children, or toddler’s diarrhea, is a frequently encountered entity in pediatric clinical practice. This disorder remains poorly understood. Suggested etiologies include malabsorption, dietary intake and motility abnormalities. We investigated the use of sacrosidase (a yeast sucrase supplement) in children with toddler’s diarrhea. The study outcome was clinical response to sacrosidase supplementation. Children, 1-6 years of age, with toddler’s diarrhea were enrolled in an open prospective trial. Stooling patterns were obtained at baseline and while on supplementation. Twelve patients were enrolled out of 40 patients who presented with chronic diarrhea. Eight patients did not respond to standard diet changes and were entered into the trial. With supplementation, 4 out of the 8 patients responded clinically with a decrease in mean daily stool frequency and an improvement in the mean daily stool consistency. Sacrosidase supplementation demonstrated a potential benefit in a subset of children with toddler’s diarrhea. Response to sacrosidase may suggest excessive sucrose intake or unrecognized partial or complete sucrase deficiency in some children with toddler’s diarrhea.

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