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Most Kids with Rumination Respond to Specialized Treatment

June 16, 2023 7:00 am

J Sabella et al. JPGN 2023; 76: 282-287. Multidisciplinary Tiered Care Is Effective for Children and Adolescents With Rumination Syndrome

The was a retrospective single-center study (n=171). The median length of treatment was 6.5 months for outpatient care, four days for intensive outpatient care and nine days for intensive inpatient care.

Key findings:

In a commentary on this article from Pediatrics Nationwide, Dr. Peter Lu noted: “What was striking to me was how effective the intensive treatment programs are. Both of those groups included the most severe of patients, oftentimes, they’ll have a feeding tube or a central line for parenteral nutrition. Even in that selected, very severe refractory group, we had very good response rates to treatment…RS is a disorder that cannot be effectively treated by a GI doctor alone…Treatment of RS involves a GI doctor and a GI psychologist, and we oftentimes will involve one of our GI dieticians”

My take: This study shows that treatment can be very effective in treating rumination syndrome, especially if the patient/family is amenable to therapy.

Related blog posts:

Also, good tips on managing rumination were given on a bowel sounds podcast: Desale Yacob & Ashley Kroon Van Diest – Rumination Syndrome (August 2021)

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Categories: Pediatric Gastroenterology Intestinal Disorder

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