Obesity and malnutrition in children and adults: A clinical review

Morgan Bradley , Julian Melchor , Rachel Carr , Sara Karjoo
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Abstract

Background

In the U.S., children and adults are consuming more low-nutrient foods with added sugar and excess fats as compared to healthy, high-quality calories and micronutrients. This diet is increasing the prevalence of malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies, despite high calorie intake. This is a review of the common micronutrient deficiencies, the risk factors for malnutrition, dietary plans, and the health consequences in children and adults with obesity in the U.S.

Methods

This clinical review of literature was performed on the MEDLINE (PubMed) search engine. A total of 1391 articles were identified and after review, a total of 130 were found to be most pertinent.

Discussion

The most common micronutrient deficiencies found in patients with obesity were vitamin A, thiamine (B1), folate (B9), cobalamin (B12), vitamin D, iron, calcium, and magnesium, especially prior and after bariatric surgery. Diets that produced the most weight reduction also further puts these individuals at risk for worsening malnutrition. Malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies can worsen health outcomes if not properly managed.

Conclusion

Adequate screening and awareness of malnutrition can improve the health outcomes in patients with obesity. Physiologic changes in response to increased adiposity and inadequate intake increase this population's risk of adverse health effects. Malnutrition affects the individual and contributes to worse public health outcomes. The recommendations for screening for malnutrition are not exclusive to individuals undergoing bariatric procedures and can improve the health outcomes of any patient with obesity. However, clearly, improved nutritional status can assist with metabolism and prevent adverse nutritional outcomes post-bariatric surgery. Clinicians should advise on proper nutrition and be aware of diets that worsen deficiencies.

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儿童和成人的肥胖和营养不良:临床综述
背景在美国,与健康、高质量的卡路里和微量营养素相比,儿童和成年人摄入的低营养食品更多,添加了糖和多余的脂肪。这种饮食增加了营养不良和营养缺乏的患病率,尽管热量摄入很高。这是对美国常见的微量营养素缺乏症、营养不良的危险因素、饮食计划以及肥胖儿童和成人的健康后果的综述。方法在MEDLINE(PubMed)搜索引擎上对文献进行临床综述。共确定了1391篇文章,经过审查,共发现130篇文章是最相关的。讨论肥胖患者最常见的微量营养素缺乏是维生素A、硫胺素(B1)、叶酸(B9)、钴胺素(B12)、维生素D、铁、钙和镁,尤其是在减肥手术前后。减肥效果最好的饮食也进一步使这些人面临营养不良恶化的风险。如果管理不当,营养不良和微量营养素缺乏会恶化健康状况。结论适当的筛查和营养不良意识可以改善肥胖患者的健康状况。肥胖增加和摄入不足导致的生理变化增加了这一人群的不良健康影响风险。营养不良影响个人,并导致更糟糕的公共卫生结果。营养不良筛查的建议并不局限于接受减肥手术的个人,它可以改善任何肥胖患者的健康状况。然而,很明显,改善营养状况可以帮助新陈代谢,并防止减肥手术后的不良营养后果。临床医生应该就适当的营养提出建议,并注意会加剧营养不足的饮食。
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