|
下面是DH朋友推荐的文章,希望对大家有点帮助。
--- In Meta-mito-autism@yahoogroups.com, Plant <aplant@g...> wrote:
PEDIATRICS Vol. 112 No. 4 October 2003, pp. 939-942
Constipation With Acquired Megarectum in Children With Autism
Nadeem Afzal,Simon Murch, PhD, Kumran Thirrupathy, , Leslie Berger,
Andrew Fagbemi, and Robert Heuschkel,
Department of Radiology, Royal Free Hospital, Hampstead, London,
United
Kingdom
Objective. Recent evidence suggests that autistic children may have
significant gastrointestinal symptoms. Although constipation occurs
in
2% to 5% of healthy children, its clinical diagnosis is often
difficult
in children with behavioral disorders. We thus aimed to assess the
prevalence of fecal loading in autistic children with
gastrointestinal
symptoms and to identify possible predictors of constipation.
Methods. We studied abdominal radiographs of 103 autistic children
(87
boys) who were referred for gastroenterological assessment, in
comparison with 29 control radiographs from children who were
referred
to the emergency department, most with abdominal pain. Radiographs
were
scored independently, in blinded manner, by 4 pediatric
gastroenterologists and a radiologist. The severity of constipation
was
determined using a validated index. Details of stool habit,
abdominal
pain, dietary history, and laxative use were obtained from case
notes.
Results. The incidence of constipation in the control subjects with
abdominal pain was higher than reported for normal children. Despite
this, moderate or severe constipation was more frequent in the
autistic
group than in the control subjects (36% vs 10%). Analysis of
rectosigmoid loading showed more striking differences (54.4% of
autistic
children had moderate/severe loading or acquired megarectum compared
with 24.1% of control subjects). Multivariate regression analysis
showed
consumption of milk to be the strongest predictor of constipation in
the
autistic group, whereas stool frequency, gluten consumption,
soiling,
and abdominal pain were not predictive of constipation.
Conclusions. Constipation is a frequent finding in children with
gastrointestinal symptoms and autism, particularly in the
rectosigmoid
colon, often with acquired megarectum. The absence of any
correlation
between the clinical history and the degree of fecal impaction in
autistic children confirms the importance of an abdominal radiograph
in
the assessment of their degree of constipation.
--- End forwarded message ---
heyou
|
|