Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection

Zinc deficiency is highly prevalent in low-income countries, with dramatic consequences to child health, in particular by impairing the immune system resulting in infection. This cross-sectional study aimed to determine the prevalence of zinc deficiency in Thai children who were admitted to hospita...

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Main Authors: Lakkana Rerksuppaphol, Sanguansak Rerksuppaphol
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-02-01
Series:Pediatric Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/pr/article/view/7386
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spelling doaj-f0dbdc8c1ae54ddea1bf7b02e577e3ae2021-01-02T12:06:52ZengMDPI AGPediatric Reports2036-749X2036-75032019-02-0111110.4081/pr.2019.7386Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infectionLakkana Rerksuppaphol0Sanguansak Rerksuppaphol1Department of Preventive Medicine, Srinakharinwirot UniversityDepartment of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Srinakharinwirot University Zinc deficiency is highly prevalent in low-income countries, with dramatic consequences to child health, in particular by impairing the immune system resulting in infection. This cross-sectional study aimed to determine the prevalence of zinc deficiency in Thai children who were admitted to hospital with a diagnosis of the dengue viral infection. Standard cut-off values according to age, sex, time of blood collection, and fasting status were used to define zinc levels. 32 patients were included in the analysis: The mean age was 7.3 years, of whom 56.3% were males. 11 (34.4%) patients were diagnosed with dengue hemorrhagic fever and the remaining had dengue fever. The prevalence of zinc deficiency was 46.7%, with boys having a higher risk of zinc deficiency than girls (OR=7.3: 95%CI: 1.5-36.6). Fever duration and length of hospital stay were longer in children with zinc deficiency compared to those who had normal levels, albeit without a significant difference. The results of this study provide the rationale for larger studies that will better elucidate the relationship between zinc levels and the clinical outcomes of dengue disease. https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/pr/article/view/7386dengue disease, zinc, children, zinc deficiency.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lakkana Rerksuppaphol
Sanguansak Rerksuppaphol
spellingShingle Lakkana Rerksuppaphol
Sanguansak Rerksuppaphol
Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection
Pediatric Reports
dengue disease, zinc, children, zinc deficiency.
author_facet Lakkana Rerksuppaphol
Sanguansak Rerksuppaphol
author_sort Lakkana Rerksuppaphol
title Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection
title_short Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection
title_full Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection
title_fullStr Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection
title_full_unstemmed Zinc deficiency in children with Dengue viral infection
title_sort zinc deficiency in children with dengue viral infection
publisher MDPI AG
series Pediatric Reports
issn 2036-749X
2036-7503
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Zinc deficiency is highly prevalent in low-income countries, with dramatic consequences to child health, in particular by impairing the immune system resulting in infection. This cross-sectional study aimed to determine the prevalence of zinc deficiency in Thai children who were admitted to hospital with a diagnosis of the dengue viral infection. Standard cut-off values according to age, sex, time of blood collection, and fasting status were used to define zinc levels. 32 patients were included in the analysis: The mean age was 7.3 years, of whom 56.3% were males. 11 (34.4%) patients were diagnosed with dengue hemorrhagic fever and the remaining had dengue fever. The prevalence of zinc deficiency was 46.7%, with boys having a higher risk of zinc deficiency than girls (OR=7.3: 95%CI: 1.5-36.6). Fever duration and length of hospital stay were longer in children with zinc deficiency compared to those who had normal levels, albeit without a significant difference. The results of this study provide the rationale for larger studies that will better elucidate the relationship between zinc levels and the clinical outcomes of dengue disease.
topic dengue disease, zinc, children, zinc deficiency.
url https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/pr/article/view/7386
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