
The objective of the study was to determine the clinical indications for antibiotic therapy in diarrhoeal diseases (DD) in 619 children aged 6 to 59 months who were evaluated during a clinical study of diarrhoea. The patients were seen at the outpatient clinic of the Palembang General Hospital from May 1991 through March 1992. Data concerning abdominal pain, pain during defecation, fever, status of breastfeeding, vomiting, mucoid stool, bloody stool, abdominal distention, stool leucocytes and erythrocytes were analyzed to determine their predictive value (PPV) in relation to the bacterial isolation of pathogen in the stool. All clinical variables examined had a low PPV for isolation of any enteric pathogen, including Shigella. The PPV of grossly bloody diarrhoea was 20.8% (95% confidence limits 17.6%-24%), and that of body temperature (> 37.5 degrees C) was 19.6%. When the stool leucocytes were 10 or more per high-power microscopic field (HPMF), the PPV was 22.2%; of erythrocytes found microscopically in the stool, 19.6%. We recommend that those patients with bloody stools and mucoid stools with temperatures of 37.5 degrees C get antibiotics (22%). Second, those patients having 10 or more leucocytes per HPMF plus those with red cells in stools (regardless of the number) should receive either antibiotics and or amoebicides if amoebae are present (5%).
Diarrhea, Male, Infant, Bacterial Infections, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Feces, Cross-Sectional Studies, Indonesia, Case-Control Studies, Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Diarrhea, Male, Infant, Bacterial Infections, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Feces, Cross-Sectional Studies, Indonesia, Case-Control Studies, Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Practice Patterns, Physicians'
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