Literature DB >> 2456738

Protein-energy malnutrition in northern Sudan: prevalence, socio-economic factors and family background.

J B Coulter1, M I Omer, G I Suliman, J B Moody, S B Macfarlane, R G Hendrickse.   

Abstract

The socio-economic and family background and the nutrition of 145 children with kwashiorkor admitted to hospital in Khartoum over a 2-year period were compared with 113 marasmic kwashiorkor, 158 marasmic, and 186 nutritionally normal controls of similar age. Peak admissions for kwashiorkor were in the wet and post-wet season and the mean (SD) age was 1.6 (0.6) months. Mothers of malnourished children were more likely to be pregnant, and had poorer housing, sanitation and water supply, a lower income and food expenditure and less education than controls. Mothers of controls breastfed their children longer, introduced mixed feeding earlier, offered a wider variety of foods, and were more likely to have had their infants immunized. Neither family instability nor cultural practices which result in separation of children from their mothers appear to have an important role in protein-energy malnutrition in the Sudan. Families of kwashiorkor children had a higher food expenditure and better maternal education than marasmic children. There was no significant difference between the two groups in duration of breastfeeding or in the age of introduction of mixed diet. However, kwashiorkor children appeared to be offered more meat. Differences in food availability could account for the relative retardation of growth and lack of subcutaneous fat in marasmus compared to kwashiorkor.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2456738     DOI: 10.1080/02724936.1988.11748548

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Trop Paediatr        ISSN: 0272-4936


  7 in total

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3.  Infection and immunoglobulin levels in Sudanese children with severe protein-energy malnutrition.

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6.  The association between malaria and malnutrition among under-five children in Shashogo District, Southern Ethiopia: a case-control study.

Authors:  Terefe Gone; Fiseha Lemango; Endale Eliso; Samuel Yohannes; Tadele Yohannes
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7.  Predicators for weight gain in children treated for severe acute malnutrition: a prospective study at nutritional rehabilitation center.

Authors:  Jyoti Sanghvi; Sudhir Mehta; Ravindra Kumar
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  7 in total

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