Y. Tazawa et al., RELATIONSHIP OF FEEDING MODALITY TO CLINICAL-FEATURES IN JAPANESE INFANTS WITH IDIOPATHIC NEONATAL HEPATITIS OF THE NONFAMILIAL FORM, Acta Paediatrica Japonica Overseas Edition, 38(4), 1996, pp. 328-333
To clarify the relationship between idiopathic neonatal hepatitis and
feeding type, that is, formula-milk feeding and breast-milk feeding, t
he medical records of 100 patients (68 male and 32 female babies) with
idiopathic neonatal hepatitis of non-familial form referred to the me
dical centers of Akita University and Tohoku University during the pas
t 18 years were reviewed. The patients were divided into two 9 year pe
riods (1975-83 and 1984-92), and their clinical features were analyzed
in terms of feeding type and sex. The number of patients enrolled dec
reased from 69 in the first half to 31 in the second half. The number
of male patients dropped from 53 to 15, although the number of female
patients (n = 16) remained the same in both 9 year periods. The freque
ncy of formula-milk feeding significantly decreased in the second half
(42/69 to 6/31, P < 0.01). Compared with the expected numbers of pati
ents in the second half calculated on the changes in the live birth po
pulation and feeding modality between the two halves, the actually enr
olled numbers of patients in the second half were less in both the mal
e and the formula-milk fed groups (x 0.35 and x 0.22), whereas the num
bers of female and breast-milk feeding groups were close to the expect
ed values (x 1.26 and x 1.08). When sex and feeding modality were comb
ined, the formula-milk fed male group showed the lowest value (x 0.10)
, and the breast-milk fed female group showed the highest value (x 2.8
5). In conclusion, feeding type, especially in combination with gender
, might be one causative factor in the occurrence of idiopathic neonat
al hepatitis.