DOI: 10.22270/jmpas.V10I4.1371

VOLUME - 10 ISSUE - 4 JULY-AUGUST 2021

Rise of rifaximin in paediatric infectious diarrhoea

Dr. Dhanasekhar Kesavelu*, Dr. C. Senthil kumari

Apollo Children’s Hospital, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

ABSTRACT

The incidence and risk of morality is high under the age of five years is due to diarrhoea. In India twenty percentage of paediatric deaths is due to diarrhoeal disease. It is the second cause of leading mortality in children after acute respiratory infections. Following on from the GEMS study when we looked at the data in the management of bacterial diarrhoea the primary treatments included oral rehydration solution, oral zinc probiotics and antibiotics. Anecdotally we noted that a lot of children were treated with oral antibiotics and the majority of them were treated with fluoroquinolones like Ofloxacin and drugs like Metronidazole there are multiple side-effects associated with the usage of fluoroquinolones and a major side-effect of that is the risk to the growing cartilage. We also noticed that irrational combinations such as imidazole like metronidazole have shown more problems than solutions .usage of Ofloxacin in children should be discouraged for all the side-effects plus the infectivity in the management of bacterial diarrhoea. The duration of treatment have paved the way for usage of drugs such as new molecules in paediatric i.e. rifaximin comes under the group of oral non-absorbable GI antibiotics broad-spectrum agents with antibacterial activity against gram positive and gram negative aerobes and Anaerobes makes Rifaximin a bactericidal drug in nature. Rifaximin is particularly recommended in children above the age of two years in acute infectious diarrhoea the mechanism of action of rifaximin is by inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis by reversibly binding to bacterial DNA dependent RNA polymerase. In this review we discussed the “phrma” behind rifaximin, clinical experience of rifaximin in children and indications and dosage of rifaximin in paediatric.

Keywords:

Diarrohea, rifaximin, paediatrics, GEMS study


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