Article
Systematic review of the occurrence of infantile colic in the
community
P L B J Lucassena, W J J Assendelftb, J Th M van Eijka, J W Gubbelsc, A C Douwesd, W J van Geldrope
a Institute for
Research in Extramural Medicine, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam,
Netherlands, b Department of General Practice, University of
Amsterdam, Netherlands, c Organisation for Research and Policy Advice,
Grave, Netherlands, d Department of Pediatrics, University Hospital
VU, Amsterdam, Netherlands, e Scientific
Committee of the Dutch College of General Practitioners, Utrecht,
Netherlands
Correspondence to: Dr P L B J Lucassen, Akkerroosstraat 18, 5761 EX Bakel, Netherlands p.lucassen1{at}chello.nl
Accepted 15 November
2000
AIMS
To assess the occurrence of
infantile colic in the community and the need for professional help;
and to study the influences of potential determinants of infantile colic.
METHODS
Surveys were identified by
a systematic search in Medline (1966-98) and Embase (1988-98).
Retrieved publications were checked for references. Studies selected
were community based, prospective, and retrospective surveys on the
occurrence of infantile colic published in English, German, French, or
Dutch. Occurrence rates were calculated as percentages. Methodological
quality of the surveys was assessed by two assessors independently with
a standardised criteria list containing items on method of data
gathering, definition of colic, and drop out rate.
RESULTS
Fifteen community based
surveys were identified. The methodological quality varied considerably
and was generally low. Even the two most methodologically sound
prospective studies yielded widely varying cumulative incidence rates
of 5-19%. Referral rates or the need to seek help because of crying
were consistently lower than occurrence rates for prolonged crying as
such. Gender, socioeconomic class, type of feeding, family history
of atopy, and parental smoking were not shown to be associated with colic.
CONCLUSION
Occurrence rates of
infantile colic vary greatly according to methodological quality. A
considerable number of parents reporting prolonged crying do not seek
or need professional help.
Keywords: infantile colic; community; incidence
© 2001 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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