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Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.

We report two cases of microvillus inclusion disease and these are the first cases in Korea. The two babies (one baby had a sibling who died of diarrhea in the neonatal period) had excreted their stools up to 200 ml/kg per day since several days after birth. Workup's included extensive infectio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Beck, N. S., Chang, Y. S., Kang, I. S., Park, W. S., Lee, H. J., Suh, Y. L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3054311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9364305
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author Beck, N. S.
Chang, Y. S.
Kang, I. S.
Park, W. S.
Lee, H. J.
Suh, Y. L.
author_facet Beck, N. S.
Chang, Y. S.
Kang, I. S.
Park, W. S.
Lee, H. J.
Suh, Y. L.
author_sort Beck, N. S.
collection PubMed
description We report two cases of microvillus inclusion disease and these are the first cases in Korea. The two babies (one baby had a sibling who died of diarrhea in the neonatal period) had excreted their stools up to 200 ml/kg per day since several days after birth. Workup's included extensive infectious, immunologic, hormonal and rheumatologic studies, all of which were negative or normal. Diagnosis rested on the ultrastructural finding of intracytoplasmic inclusions that contained intact microvilli on electron microscopy. We tried somatostatin analogue (octreotide, 4 micrograms/kg/day), cholestyramine (up to 4g t.i.d.), steroid (prednisone, 2 mg/kg/day) and intravenous epidermal growth factor (100 ng/kg/hr for 2 weeks), but there was mild improvement with cholestyramine (decrease stool volume) and epidermal growth factor (increase the number of microvilli per cell) but no improvement was noted with the other treatments. Although it is a rare disorder and the prognosis of microvillus inclusion disease is poor, it must be considered if an infant has chronic secretory diarrhea.
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spelling pubmed-30543112011-03-15 Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants. Beck, N. S. Chang, Y. S. Kang, I. S. Park, W. S. Lee, H. J. Suh, Y. L. J Korean Med Sci Research Article We report two cases of microvillus inclusion disease and these are the first cases in Korea. The two babies (one baby had a sibling who died of diarrhea in the neonatal period) had excreted their stools up to 200 ml/kg per day since several days after birth. Workup's included extensive infectious, immunologic, hormonal and rheumatologic studies, all of which were negative or normal. Diagnosis rested on the ultrastructural finding of intracytoplasmic inclusions that contained intact microvilli on electron microscopy. We tried somatostatin analogue (octreotide, 4 micrograms/kg/day), cholestyramine (up to 4g t.i.d.), steroid (prednisone, 2 mg/kg/day) and intravenous epidermal growth factor (100 ng/kg/hr for 2 weeks), but there was mild improvement with cholestyramine (decrease stool volume) and epidermal growth factor (increase the number of microvilli per cell) but no improvement was noted with the other treatments. Although it is a rare disorder and the prognosis of microvillus inclusion disease is poor, it must be considered if an infant has chronic secretory diarrhea. Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 1997-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3054311/ /pubmed/9364305 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Beck, N. S.
Chang, Y. S.
Kang, I. S.
Park, W. S.
Lee, H. J.
Suh, Y. L.
Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.
title Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.
title_full Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.
title_fullStr Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.
title_full_unstemmed Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.
title_short Microvillus inclusion disease in two Korean infants.
title_sort microvillus inclusion disease in two korean infants.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3054311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9364305
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