Environmental and Physiological Barriers to Child Growth and Development.

Q1 Medicine Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-01-28 DOI:10.1159/000503349
Andrew M Prentice
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Aggregated analyses of child growth in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) reveal a remarkably consistent picture of serious growth failure compared to the WHO reference growth curves. Impoverished diets with low dietary diversity are a key driver of poor growth, but there are important additional environmental factors that limit the uptake and utilization of nutrients. This paper considers such factors. A large proportion of the rapid growth deterioration in later infancy can be ascribed to infections and to wider nonspecific effects of living in an unhygienic environment, including the ingestion of toxins such as aflatoxin. Despite never revealing themselves as clinical syndromes, the great majority of children in rural low-income settings of Africa and Asia are antibody positive to numerous pathogens (CMV, EB, HepB, Helicobacter pylori, and many more) by 24 m; these infections must take their toll. Additionally, there is a syndrome widely termed environmental enteric disease that combines gut leakage with a chronic inflammation leading to nutrient losses and cytokine-mediated growth retardation. Systemic inflammation also inhibits nutrient uptake and utilization. Elimination of these environmental barriers will be key to achieving optimal child growth and development in LMICs.

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儿童生长发育的环境和生理障碍。
对低收入和中等收入国家儿童生长的综合分析显示,与世卫组织参考生长曲线相比,严重生长衰竭的情况非常一致。饮食多样性低的贫困饮食是生长不良的关键驱动因素,但还有其他重要的环境因素限制了营养物质的吸收和利用。本文考虑了这些因素。婴儿后期快速生长恶化的很大一部分可归因于感染和生活在不卫生环境中更广泛的非特异性影响,包括摄入黄曲霉毒素等毒素。尽管从未表现出临床综合征,但非洲和亚洲农村低收入环境中的绝大多数儿童在24岁时对多种病原体(巨细胞病毒、EB、乙肝、幽门螺杆菌等)的抗体呈阳性;这些感染一定会造成损失。此外,还有一种被广泛称为环境性肠道疾病的综合征,它结合了肠道渗漏和慢性炎症,导致营养物质损失和细胞因子介导的生长迟缓。全身性炎症也会抑制营养的吸收和利用。消除这些环境障碍将是中低收入国家儿童实现最佳生长发育的关键。
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来源期刊
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊最新文献
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