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Management of Shock in Children With SAM or Severe Underweight and Diarrhea
Sponsor: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
Summary
Diarrhea is one of the leading causes of under-five childhood mortality and accounts for 8% of 5.4 million global under-5 deaths. The coexistence of sepsis and hypovolemic shock in children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) having diarrhea is common. At Dhaka hospital of icddr,b, the death rate is as high as 40% and 69% in children with severe sepsis and septic shock respectively with co-morbidities such as severe malnutrition. The conventional management of SAM children with features of severe sepsis recommended by WHO includes administration of boluses of isotonic saline followed by blood transfusion in unresponsive cases with septic shock; whereas the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) guideline recommends vasoactive support. To date, no study has evaluated systematically the effects of inotrope(s) and vasopressor or blood transfusion in children with dehydrating diarrhea (for example, in cholera) and SAM having shock and unresponsive to WHO standard fluid therapy. This randomized trial will generate evidence whether inotrope and vasopressor or blood transfusion should be selected for severely malnourished children having hypotensive shock and who failed to respond to WHO standard fluid bolus.
Official title: Randomized Controlled Trial of Dopamine, Adrenaline, and Blood Transfusion for Treatment of Fluid Refractory Shock in Children With Severe Acute Malnutrition or Severe Underweight and Cholera or Other Dehydrating Diarrheas
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
1 Month - 59 Months
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
135
Start Date
2021-08-17
Completion Date
2025-11-30
Last Updated
2025-04-16
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Blood and Dopamine
Children in this group will receive a transfusion of whole human blood in a dose of 10 mL/kg over 2-3 hours. They will also receive dopamine, 8 microgram/kg.min (increasing the dose after 15 minutes to 12 microgram/kg/min to a maximum of 15 microgram/kg/min)
Blood and adrenaline
Children in this group will receive a transfusion of whole human blood in a dose of 10 mL/kg over 2-3 hours. They will also receive adrenaline, 0.1 microgram/kg/min (increasing the dose after 15 minutes to 0.2 microgram/kg.min to a maximum of 0.3 microgram/kg.min)
Locations (1)
Icddr,B
Dhaka, Bangladesh