Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea

Objective To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy and agreement between the 1980 and 1990 WHO criteria for determining the de- gree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea. Methods This prospective study was conducted in two hospitals from October 2002 to February 2003. Clinical signs of dehydrat...

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Main Authors: Suprawita Sari, Supriatmo Supriatmo, S L Margaretha, S Nafianti, B Hasibuan, A B Sinuhaji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indonesian Pediatric Society Publishing House 2016-10-01
Series:Paediatrica Indonesiana
Subjects:
Online Access:https://paediatricaindonesiana.org/index.php/paediatrica-indonesiana/article/view/804
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spelling doaj-9d72a075d122437f9fe85cd78ea9cbe92020-11-24T21:37:06ZengIndonesian Pediatric Society Publishing HousePaediatrica Indonesiana0030-93112338-476X2016-10-01452768010.14238/pi45.2.2005.76-80667Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrheaSuprawita SariSupriatmo SupriatmoS L MargarethaS NafiantiB HasibuanA B SinuhajiObjective To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy and agreement between the 1980 and 1990 WHO criteria for determining the de- gree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea. Methods This prospective study was conducted in two hospitals from October 2002 to February 2003. Clinical signs of dehydration all patients were recorded. The degree of dehydration based on the 1980 and 1990 WHO criteria was determined and compared with fluid deficit measured by the difference of body weight on ad- mission and on discharge. Chi-square test and kappa value analy- ses were performed. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and accuracy of each WHO criteria were assessed. The prevalence of dehydration was also determined. Results Sixty-five patients, comprising 40 boys and 25 girls, were studied. There was a significant difference between the two WHO criteria in differentiating between dehydration and non-dehydra- tion (P<0.05). Based on the 1980 WHO criteria the prevalence of dehydration was 62.2%. Its sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy in diagnosing dehydration were 100.0%, 55.5%, and 86.2%, respec- tively. Based on the 1990 WHO criteria, the prevalence of dehy- dration was 60.0%. Its sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy in diag- nosing dehydration were 94.9%, 46.1%, and 75.4%, respectively. There was also a significant difference between both criteria in determining severe dehydration (P<0.05). Based on the 1980 cri- teria, the prevalence of severe dehydration was 15.4%. Its sensi- tivity, specificity, and accuracy in diagnosing severe dehydration were 30.0%, 94.5%, and 84.6%, respectively. Based on the 1990 criteria, these results were 40.0%, 94.5%, and 86.2%, respectively. The prevalence was 15.4%. Kappa value comparing the two WHO criteria was 0.852 in diagnosing dehydration and 0.915 in diag- nosing severe dehydration. There was no significant difference between the two criteria in their sensitivity and specificity (P>0.05). Conclusion Both WHO criteria can be applied to determine de- hydration in patients with acute diarrhea, although we feel that the 1990 criteria is simplerhttps://paediatricaindonesiana.org/index.php/paediatrica-indonesiana/article/view/804WHO criteriaacute diarrheadehydrationfluid deficitsensitivityspecificityagreement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suprawita Sari
Supriatmo Supriatmo
S L Margaretha
S Nafianti
B Hasibuan
A B Sinuhaji
spellingShingle Suprawita Sari
Supriatmo Supriatmo
S L Margaretha
S Nafianti
B Hasibuan
A B Sinuhaji
Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
Paediatrica Indonesiana
WHO criteria
acute diarrhea
dehydration
fluid deficit
sensitivity
specificity
agreement
author_facet Suprawita Sari
Supriatmo Supriatmo
S L Margaretha
S Nafianti
B Hasibuan
A B Sinuhaji
author_sort Suprawita Sari
title Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
title_short Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
title_full Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
title_fullStr Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of WHO criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
title_sort evaluation of who criteria to determine degree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea
publisher Indonesian Pediatric Society Publishing House
series Paediatrica Indonesiana
issn 0030-9311
2338-476X
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Objective To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy and agreement between the 1980 and 1990 WHO criteria for determining the de- gree of dehydration in children with acute diarrhea. Methods This prospective study was conducted in two hospitals from October 2002 to February 2003. Clinical signs of dehydration all patients were recorded. The degree of dehydration based on the 1980 and 1990 WHO criteria was determined and compared with fluid deficit measured by the difference of body weight on ad- mission and on discharge. Chi-square test and kappa value analy- ses were performed. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and accuracy of each WHO criteria were assessed. The prevalence of dehydration was also determined. Results Sixty-five patients, comprising 40 boys and 25 girls, were studied. There was a significant difference between the two WHO criteria in differentiating between dehydration and non-dehydra- tion (P<0.05). Based on the 1980 WHO criteria the prevalence of dehydration was 62.2%. Its sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy in diagnosing dehydration were 100.0%, 55.5%, and 86.2%, respec- tively. Based on the 1990 WHO criteria, the prevalence of dehy- dration was 60.0%. Its sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy in diag- nosing dehydration were 94.9%, 46.1%, and 75.4%, respectively. There was also a significant difference between both criteria in determining severe dehydration (P<0.05). Based on the 1980 cri- teria, the prevalence of severe dehydration was 15.4%. Its sensi- tivity, specificity, and accuracy in diagnosing severe dehydration were 30.0%, 94.5%, and 84.6%, respectively. Based on the 1990 criteria, these results were 40.0%, 94.5%, and 86.2%, respectively. The prevalence was 15.4%. Kappa value comparing the two WHO criteria was 0.852 in diagnosing dehydration and 0.915 in diag- nosing severe dehydration. There was no significant difference between the two criteria in their sensitivity and specificity (P>0.05). Conclusion Both WHO criteria can be applied to determine de- hydration in patients with acute diarrhea, although we feel that the 1990 criteria is simpler
topic WHO criteria
acute diarrhea
dehydration
fluid deficit
sensitivity
specificity
agreement
url https://paediatricaindonesiana.org/index.php/paediatrica-indonesiana/article/view/804
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