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October 1, 2001 Antibiotic Linked To Newborns' Intestinal DisorderINDIANAPOLIS - An Indiana University School of Medicine study has confirmed
a linkage between erythromycin, one of the most commonly prescribed antibiotics,
and the subsequent development of pyloric stenosis, a condition that affects
one in 500 newborns. The study appears in the current issue of the Journal
of Pediatrics. Pyloric stenosis, which usually occurs in the first or second month of
life, is a blockage of the outlet of the stomach that causes projectile
vomiting, leading to weight loss and dehydration. It is the most common
indication for abdominal surgery in infancy. "The link between erythromycin and pyloric stenosis is an important
finding which will make a difference to the health of babies," said
the study's principal investigator, Barbara E. Mahon, M.D., M.P.H., a
clinical assistant professor of pediatrics at the IU School of Medicine.
Using clinical data extracted from the Regenstrief Medical Record System
-- a comprehensive electronic medical records system that gathers and
stores data including diagnoses, radiology and operative reports, pharmacy
records, and physician observations -- the researchers studied 14, 876
babies born between June 1993 and December 1999. They found that if given
erthromycin during the first two weeks of life, babies were 10.5 times
more likely to develop pyloric stenosis than babies who were not given
the antibiotic. "This large scale study could only have been undertaken with the vast amount of data available in the Regenstrief system," said Dr. Mahon. Co-authors of the study are Marc Rosenman, M.D. a health services research fellow at the Regenstrief Institute for Healthcare, and Martin Kleiman, M.D., Ryan White Professor of Pediatrics at the IU School of Medicine.
The IU School of Medicine study also showed that babies who received an erythromycin eye ointment, a common treatment for conjunctivitis, did not have a higher risk of pyloric stenosis. ### Media Contact: Cindy Fox Aisen
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