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Decrease in Net Stool Output in Cholera during Intestinal Perfusion with Glucose-Containing Solutions

List of authors.
  • Norbert Hirschhorn, M.D.,
  • Joseph L. Kinzie, M.D.,
  • David B. Sachar, M.D.,
  • Robert S. Northrup, M.D.,
  • James O. Taylor, M.D.,
  • S. Zafar Ahmad, M.Sc.,
  • and Robert A. Phillips, M.D.

Abstract

The rate of intestinal fluid loss was decreased significantly in eight patients with cholera when electrolyte solutions containing glucose were administered intragastrically or into the intestine for periods of 12 to 32 hours. During alternating periods of perfusion without glucose, or without any perfusion, the rate of fluid loss did not differ significantly from the natural course of diarrhea in 25 control patients. Thus, the normal mechanism of enhancement of intestinal sodium absorption by an actively transported sugar seems intact in cholera. Where intravenous fluids are scarce in cholera-affected areas, oral electrolyte solutions containing glucose can supplement parenteral fluids in the treatment of cholera.

Funding and Disclosures

The Pakistan-SEATO Cholera Research Laboratory is a part of the SEATO-Cholera Research Program and is supported by the United States Department of State, Agency for International Development, by the National Institutes of Health, by the National Communicable Disease Center of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, United States Public Health Service, and by the governments of Pakistan, United Kingdom and other SEATO nations. The NIH Cholera Advisory Committee co-ordinates the research program.

Supported in part by research agreement 196802 between the National Institutes of Health, United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, and the Pakistan-SEATO Cholera Research Laboratory, Dacca, East Pakistan.

We are indebted to the Pakistan-SEATO Cholera Research Laboratory Nursing Staff (Miss D. Torrence, O.B.E., head nurse) for assistance, to Mr. Allauddin Choudhury for statistical analysis and to Drs. W. Kendrick Hare and Irwin H. Rosenberg for a critical review of the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

* From the Pakistan-SEATO Cholera Research Laboratory, Dacca, East Pakistan (address reprint requests to Dr. Hirschhorn at the Beth Israel Hospital, 330 Brookline Ave., Boston, Mass. 02215).

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