Giardiasis is an infection of the intestine caused by a parasite called Giardia.
A child may become infected if:
Symptoms may not start until 1 to 2 weeks after your child is exposed to the parasite. Symptoms may include:
Some children with giardiasis do not have any symptoms.
Your child's healthcare provider will review your child's symptoms, examine him, and send a sample of bowel movement to a laboratory for testing. The results of the testing are usually available in 2 or 3 days.
Your child’s healthcare provider may prescribe an antibiotic. Your child should take all of the medicine as prescribed. If your child stops taking the medicine when the symptoms are gone but before the parasite is gone from the body, the infection may come back. If your child has side effects from the medicine, contact your healthcare provider.
Taking antibiotics helps your child’s symptoms, and also help to prevent spreading the disease to others, for example, in a day care center.
Symptoms of giardiasis may last for 2 to 6 weeks. Sometimes it lasts longer.
Large amounts of watery diarrhea can cause dehydration. Dehydration needs to be treated by replacing lost fluids. Talk with your healthcare provider about oral rehydrating or electrolyte drinks. Your provider can tell you how much to give your child. Juice, tea, or bullion are good fluids, but your child still needs electrolyte solutions.
Your child can eat and drink normally in addition to drinking the electrolyte solutions. If your child is too sick to his stomach to drink, let him suck on Popsicles.
Eating may produce more stool, but will not cause the illness to last longer.
Foods that are easiest to digest are soft foods, such as bananas, cooked cereal, rice, plain noodles, gelatin, eggs, toast or bread with jelly, and applesauce. For several days it is best to avoid fresh fruit (other than bananas), greasy or fatty foods such as cheeseburgers or bacon, highly seasoned or spicy foods, and most fresh vegetables. Cooked carrots, potatoes, and squash are fine. If eating seems to worsen the diarrhea, go back to clear liquids for a few hours.
If your child has cramps or stomach pain, it may help to put a hot water bottle or electric heating pad on his or her stomach. Cover the hot water bottle with a towel or set the heating pad at low to prevent burns.
Do not give your child medicines to treat diarrhea, such as Kaopectate, Imodium, or Lomotil. These medicines can make the illness worse.
If your child keeps having symptoms, gets worse, or gets new symptoms, tell your child's healthcare provider.