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Infantile colic, regurgitation, and constipation: an early traumatic insult in the development of functional gastrointestinal disorders in children?

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Abstract

Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) are defined as a variable combination of chronic or recurrent gastrointestinal symptoms not explained by structural or biochemical abnormalities. Infantile colic, gastroesophageal reflux, and constipation are the most common FGIDs that lead to referral to a pediatrician during the first 6 months of life and are often responsible for hospitalization, feeding changes, use of drugs, parental anxiety, and loss of parental working days with relevant social consequences. We performed a retrospective study on patients referred for recurrent abdominal pain from January 2002 trough December 2009 to our Pediatric Gastroenterology Outpatient Unit. The population studied was matched with healthy control without history of recurrent abdominal pain, enrolled among pediatricians practicing primary health care. History of infantile colic, regurgitation, and functional constipation was detected respectively in 26.41, 25.31, and 30.16 % of children diagnosed with FGIDs compared to 11.34, 12.85, and 11.76 % of healthy children.

Conclusion: According to our data, children with a history of gastrointestinal infantile distress have a higher prevalence of FGIDs years later.

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Abbreviations

FGIDs:

Functional gastrointestinal disorders

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Contributors’ list

Dr Indrio and Dr Francavilla had both equally primary responsibility for protocol development, patient screening, enrollment, outcome assessment, preliminary data analysis, and writing of the manuscript. Drs Di Mauro and Riezzo participated in the development of the protocol and analytic framework for the study. Dr Cavallo supervised the design and execution of the study and contributed to the writing of the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Flavia Indrio.

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Communicated by Peter de Winter

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Indrio, F., Di Mauro, A., Riezzo, G. et al. Infantile colic, regurgitation, and constipation: an early traumatic insult in the development of functional gastrointestinal disorders in children?. Eur J Pediatr 174, 841–842 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-014-2467-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-014-2467-3

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