New Study Examines the Effect of Probiotics to Prevent or Treat Excessive Infant Crying
Insufficient evidence is available to support the use of
probiotics (Lactobacillus reuteri) to manage colic or to prevent crying
in infants, reveals study by Valerie Sung, M.P.H., of the Murdoch
Childrens Research Institute and Royal Children's Hospital, Australia,
and colleagues.
Researchers conducted a systematic review of 12 trials that
randomized 1,825 infants three months or younger to oral probiotics vs.
placebo, or to no or standard treatment. Five of the trials examined the
effectiveness of probiotics in the treatment of infant colic and seven
examined their role in infant colic prevention. The outcome was the
duration or number of episodes of infant crying/distress or diagnosis of
"infant colic." According to study findings, six of the 12 trials suggested probiotics
reduced crying and six did not. Three of the five management trials
concluded probiotics effectively treat colic in breastfed babies; one
suggested possible effectiveness in formula-fed babies with colic, and
one suggested ineffectiveness in breastfed babies with colic. "Larger
and more rigorously designed randomized clinical trials are needed to
examine the efficacy of the probiotic L reuteri in the management of
breastfed and particularly formula-fed infants with colic and in the
prevention of colic in healthy term infants," the study concludes.Source-Newswise
No comments:
Post a Comment