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Monday, December 3, 2012

Antibiotics children's exposure to inflammatory bowel

Antibiotics children's exposure to inflammatory bowel
Warned a recent U.S. study of children addressed some types of antibiotics at an early age, exposing them for bowel disease.
The study says that whenever drug use among children at an early age and the higher doses, increased their risk of inflammatory bowel disease such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.
States that already earlier studies that pointed to the existence of a relationship between taking antibiotics and disease intestine, but most were limited, while discussed the current study, recently published in the Journal of Pediatrics, the more data than a million children under the age of 18 years.
It was the follow-up of these children for two years or more during the period between 1994 and 2009, researchers found that about 64% of the children ate certain types of antibiotics at least once in their lives, and that about 58% of them took antibiotics that target the bacteria that do not need oxygen to grow and known as antianaerobic antibiotics.
In the follow-up period show that almost 750 children infected with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. The symptoms of these diseases in the continuing suffering of stomach pain, diarrhea, weight loss, and increased risk of foodborne illness among children who ate those antibiotics before reaching one year of age, but less than these risks significantly greater age of the child when dealing with these drugs.

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