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Malaria: Spoonful of sugar could save thousands of children

Malaria: Spoonful of sugar could save thousands of childrenAFP - Friday, February 20
PARIS
(AFP) - - A teaspoon of moistened sugar under the tongue could save the
lives of thousands of children suffering from hypoglycemia caused by
malaria, a researcher who conducted clinical trials said Thursday.

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Malaria
claims more than a million lives a year -- 800,000 of them African
children aged under five -- and sickens hundreds of millions more,
according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
The rapid drop
in blood sugar that frequently accompanies severe malaria kills many
children in remote parts of Africa before they can reach a clinic for
an intravenous dose of glucose, the proven treatment for hypoglycaemia.
Hubert
Barennes, a French doctor who worked with public health services in
several sub-Saharan countries from 1987 through 2002, saw the
devastating affect of sudden sugar loss nearly every day.
He reasoned that a bit of the sweet stuff taken orally might at least help relieve the life-threatening symptoms.
"But
at the time we didn't have any studies proving that it would be
effective," he said by e-mail from Laos, where he is a physician at the
Francophone Institute of Tropical Medicine.
"Only techniques that
have been proven through scientific research are accepted, so-called
'evidence-based medicine," he explained.
"That's a good thing.
But sometimes these studies are hard to do -- there were not a lot of
resources available for researchers working in Africa."
Barennes
decided to put his idea into practice anyhow and -- in cooperation with
local doctors -- began sugar treatments in Niger in the late 1990s. It
seemed to work.
In the following decade, he tried repeatedly to get various public health authorities to fund trials.
It
took far longer than he would have liked but in 2006 Barennes led a
team of a dozen researchers in conducting clinical research in Mali
that provided the first solid evidence that a spoonful of sugar can, in
fact, save lives.
In the study, 23 children with severe malaria
and dangerously low blood glucose concentrations were randomly assigned
to two different treatments.
One was given the standard therapy
of intravenous glucose, and the other received a bit of moistened sugar
under the tongue every 20 minutes.
The results were unambiguous
-- the sugar doses worked just as well as the IV treatment, despite
several cases in which children swallowed the sugar rather than letting
it dissolve slowly under the tongue, thus reducing its effectiveness.
"This
study was performed in the field conditions of a busy West African
paediatric ward during the malaria season," the authors cautioned. The
number of participants was also less than optimal.
But even with
these limitations, "the results indicate sufficient safety and efficacy
to justify the use of sublingual (under the tongue) sugar at the
community level and to justify a larger trial," they concluded.
The
benefits of sugar treatment might extend beyond malaria to other
conditions that provoke a potentially lethal drop in blood sugar, such
as malnutrition and poisoning, they noted.
Malaria-related hypoglycemia is more critical in children, who have fewer reserves on which to draw when sugar levels drop.
"But
there is a good chance that sugar under the tongue would work as
quickly with adults too. We will need another study to verify that,"
Barennes said.


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