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Acute Infectious Diarrhea.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2024; 1449:143-156.AE

Abstract

Acute infectious diarrhea (AID) is one of the most common diseases in pediatric age with relevant burden both in high and in low-income countries. Thanks to their direct action on enterocyte functions and indirect actions on the mucosal and systemic immune system and on intestinal microbiome, probiotics are an ideal intervention to treat AID in childhood. However, their efficacy is strictly related to strains and indications, and practitioners should take this information into account in clinical practice. This chapter summarizes the main mechanisms of action of probiotics in AID, with a focus on proof of efficacy supporting their use in prevention and treatment of childhood AID. The use of selected strains in appropriate doses is strongly recommended by guidelines of AID, based on compelling proofs of efficacy and safety. At present, therapy with probiotics of AID is probably the strongest indication for probiotic use in medicine. Their role in prevention of AID is however questionable in healthy population, whereas it should be considered in at-risk population. Evidence for prevention of diarrhea in day-care centers and communities is lacking, but consistent evidence supports efficacy in prevention of hospital acquired diarrhea. Finally, this chapter presents novelties on this topic, in particular the role of rotavirus immunization on probiotics effectiveness and the effect of probiotics and postbiotics on Covid-associated diarrhea.Overall: AID is the most convincing area for probiotic use in children with gastrointestinal disorders, and effective strains should be used early on after onset of symptoms.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Translational Medical Sciences - Section of Pediatrics, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy.Department of Translational Medical Sciences - Section of Pediatrics, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy.Department of Translational Medical Sciences - Section of Pediatrics, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy.Department of Translational Medical Sciences - Section of Pediatrics, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy. alfguari@unina.it.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

39060736

Citation

Poeta, Marco, et al. "Acute Infectious Diarrhea." Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, vol. 1449, 2024, pp. 143-156.
Poeta M, Del Bene M, Lo Vecchio A, et al. Acute Infectious Diarrhea. Adv Exp Med Biol. 2024;1449:143-156.
Poeta, M., Del Bene, M., Lo Vecchio, A., & Guarino, A. (2024). Acute Infectious Diarrhea. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 1449, 143-156. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-58572-2_9
Poeta M, et al. Acute Infectious Diarrhea. Adv Exp Med Biol. 2024;1449:143-156. PubMed PMID: 39060736.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Acute Infectious Diarrhea. AU - Poeta,Marco, AU - Del Bene,Margherita, AU - Lo Vecchio,Andrea, AU - Guarino,Alfredo, PY - 2024/7/28/medline PY - 2024/7/27/pubmed PY - 2024/7/26/entrez KW - Diarrhea KW - Gastroenteritis KW - Gastrointestinal infections KW - Probiotics SP - 143 EP - 156 JF - Advances in experimental medicine and biology JO - Adv Exp Med Biol VL - 1449 N2 - Acute infectious diarrhea (AID) is one of the most common diseases in pediatric age with relevant burden both in high and in low-income countries. Thanks to their direct action on enterocyte functions and indirect actions on the mucosal and systemic immune system and on intestinal microbiome, probiotics are an ideal intervention to treat AID in childhood. However, their efficacy is strictly related to strains and indications, and practitioners should take this information into account in clinical practice. This chapter summarizes the main mechanisms of action of probiotics in AID, with a focus on proof of efficacy supporting their use in prevention and treatment of childhood AID. The use of selected strains in appropriate doses is strongly recommended by guidelines of AID, based on compelling proofs of efficacy and safety. At present, therapy with probiotics of AID is probably the strongest indication for probiotic use in medicine. Their role in prevention of AID is however questionable in healthy population, whereas it should be considered in at-risk population. Evidence for prevention of diarrhea in day-care centers and communities is lacking, but consistent evidence supports efficacy in prevention of hospital acquired diarrhea. Finally, this chapter presents novelties on this topic, in particular the role of rotavirus immunization on probiotics effectiveness and the effect of probiotics and postbiotics on Covid-associated diarrhea.Overall: AID is the most convincing area for probiotic use in children with gastrointestinal disorders, and effective strains should be used early on after onset of symptoms. SN - 0065-2598 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/39060736/Acute_Infectious_Diarrhea DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -