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Antibiotics Usually Not Needed For Pink Eye
For most kids with pink eye, also known as acute infective conjunctivitis,
the condition will usually resolve on its own, without antibiotic
treatment, results of a UK study suggest.
Pink eye often results from a bacterial infection and standard
clinical practice is the prescription of antibiotic eyedrops
or ointments, Dr. Peter Rose of the University of Oxford and
colleagues explain in The Lancet. Previous studies showing that
antibiotics were the best treatment for pink eye largely involved
patients with severe forms of the disease.
The current study involved 326 children who were evaluated by
a primary medical doctor for pink eye and were randomly assigned
to receive eye drops containing antibiotic or inactive "placebo" drops.
The children were otherwise healthy and had no disorders that
would compromise the body's ability to fight off infection.
Testing revealed that about 80 percent of infections were bacterial.
Nevertheless, 86 percent of those treated with antibiotics and
83 percent of those in the placebo group were clinically cured
after 7 days, despite the fact that only 40 and 23 percent, respectively,
showed no evidence of bacterial infection at 7 days.
Thus, the authors deduce, destroying all the bacteria present
is not essential for clinical cure. During 6 weeks of follow-up,
a return of pink eye was equally rare in both groups.
The results show that healthy children with pink eye do not
need an antibiotic when first seen by their primary medical doctor,
Rose's team writes. "Parents should be encouraged to treat children
themselves without medical consultation, unless their child develops
unusual symptoms or the symptoms persist for more than a week," they
conclude.
SOURCE: The Lancet
Reference
Source 89
June
23 ,
2005
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