Therapeutic and preventive effects of zinc on serious childhood infectious diseases in developing countries.
Study Design
- Тип исследования
- Meta-Analysis
- Популяция
- children
- Длительность
- 2.0 weeks
- Вмешательство
- Therapeutic and preventive effects of zinc on serious childhood infectious diseases in developing countries. None
- Препарат сравнения
- None
- Первичный исход
- immune function
- Направление эффекта
- Mixed
- Риск систематической ошибки
- Low
Abstract
In children in developing countries, zinc deficiency may be common and associated with immune impairment and increased risk of serious infectious diseases such as diarrhea, pneumonia, and malaria. Studies have evaluated the therapeutic effects of zinc supplementation during acute or persistent diarrhea. In studies of acute diarrhea, the illness duration has been found to be 9-23% shorter in zinc-supplemented than in control children. Diarrhea was also less severe in zinc-supplemented children. In studies of persistent diarrhea, the effect sizes were similar but were often not statistically significant, perhaps because of the small number of children participating in these studies. Trials that provided continuous daily zinc supplementation for 5-15 mo evaluated effects on the incidence of diarrhea and in some studies acute lower respiratory infections and malaria. The reduction in the incidence of diarrhea in the zinc-supplemented group in these studies ranged from 8% to 45%. A study that gave 2 wk of zinc supplementation found preventive effects against diarrhea for the 3 mo of surveillance. More limited data also suggest that the incidence of acute lower respiratory infection and clinical attacks of malaria may also be reduced by zinc supplementation. If these results are confirmed by meta-analysis of the existing trials and additional research, improvement of zinc nutriture should become a priority intervention to reduce the high burden of serious infectious disease in children in developing countries.
Кратко
Improvement of zinc nutriture should become a priority intervention to reduce the high burden of serious infectious disease in children in developing countries.
Used In Evidence Reviews
Similar Papers
Advances in nutrition (Bethesda, Md.) · 2013
Discovery of human zinc deficiency: its impact on human health and disease.
The American journal of clinical nutrition · 2000
Therapeutic effects of oral zinc in acute and persistent diarrhea in children in developing countries: pooled analysis of randomized controlled trials.
The Journal of nutrition · 2003
Zinc deficiency, infectious disease and mortality in the developing world.
Food and nutrition bulletin · 2009
Preventive zinc supplementation among infants, preschoolers, and older prepubertal children.
Pediatrics · 2008
A meta-analysis of the effects of oral zinc in the treatment of acute and persistent diarrhea.
Pediatrics · 2002