| Literature DB >> 30559964 |
Paul Binns1, Mark Myatt1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Using mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) to identify severe acute malnutrition (SAM) tends to identify younger and stunted children compared to alternative anthropometric case-definitions. It has been asserted by some experts, without supporting evidence, that stunted children with low MUAC may have normal weight for height and treatment with ready to use therapeutic food (RUTF) will cause excess adiposity, placing the child at risk for non-communicable diseases (NCD) later in life. It is recommended that children aged less than 6 months should not be treated with RUTF. Height cut-offs are frequently used in SAM treatment programmes to identify children likely to be aged less than 6 months and thus not eligible for treatment with RUTF. This is likely to exclude some stunted children aged 6 months or older. This study examined whether stunted children aged 6 months or older with SAM, identified by MUAC, and treated with RUTF were overweight or had excess adiposity when discharged cured with a MUAC of greater than 125 mm.Entities:
Keywords: CMAM; MUAC; Overweight; RUTF; SAM; Stunting; Triceps skinfold thickness
Year: 2018 PMID: 30559964 PMCID: PMC6292002 DOI: 10.1186/s13690-018-0321-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Public Health ISSN: 0778-7367
Fig. 1Anthropometric deficits at admission in 163 cured SAM cases (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012)
Anthropometry measures at discharge, (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012)
| Count (%) in each z-score class | Summary | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index | z < − 2 | - 2 ≤ z ≤ 2 | z > 2 | All | Median z | IQR |
| W/H | 0 (0.0%) | 163 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 163 (100.0%) | −0.50 | − 0.98 to − 0.12 |
| W/A | 112 (68.3%) | 51 (31.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 163 (100.0%) | −2.37 | − 2.91 to −1.87 |
| TSF/A | 8 (4.9%) | 155 (95.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 163 (100.0%) | −0.76 | −1.35 to − 0.36 |
| AFI/A | 1 (0.6%) | 162 (99.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 163 (100.0%) | −0.65 | −1.06 to − 0.29 |
Fig. 2a Distribution of weight-for-height (W/H), b weight-for-age (W/A), c triceps skinfold-thickness-for-age (TSF/A), and d arm-fat-index-for-age z-scores at discharge (AFI/A). (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012)
TSF/A z-score at discharge for three classes of stuntedness at admission (n = 163), (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012)
| HAZ at admission | Median TSF/A at discharge | IQR | Maximum TSF/A at discharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| HAZ < − 3 | − 0.70 | − 1.09 to − 0.30 | + 1.08 |
| −3 ≤ HAZ < − 2 | − 1.04 | − 1.58 to − 0.44 | + 0.27 |
| HAZ ≥ − 2 | − 1.16 | −1.60 to − 0.62 | + 0.85 |
AFI/A at discharge for 3 classes of stuntedness at admission (n = 163), (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012)
| HAZ at admission | Median AFI/A at discharge | IQR | Maximum AFI/A at discharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| HAZ < − 3 | − 0.57 | −0.82 to − 0.03 | + 1.20 |
| − 3 ≤ HAZ < − 2 | − 1.00 | − 1.39 to − 0.60 | + 0.13 |
| HAZ ≥ − 2 | − 1.02 | −0.34 to − 0.86 | + 0.56 |
Fig. 3a & b Triceps skinfold-for-age (TSF/A) & Arm fat index-for-age (AFI/A) z-score at discharge by degree of stuntedness at admission. (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012). c & d Triceps skinfold-for-age (TSF/A & Arm fat index-for-age (AFI/A) z-score at discharge for two height classes at admission (Lilongwe District, Malawi Feb 2011 to March 2012). a to d: For the box plots presented in Fig. 3a to 3D, the box extends between the upper and lower quartiles with the thick line in the box marking the position of the median. The whiskers extend to 1.5 times the interquartile distance above and below the upper and lower quartiles