Diarrhoea and growth faltering in rural Zimbabwe.
1994
In Zimbabwe health workers collected data on diarrhea incidence every week and anthropometric data once a month from 204 children aged less than 12 months to examine the association between diarrhea and growth faltering. 73 children were enrolled at birth. 148 children were followed throughout the entire study. 11 children died (8 because of diarrhea or protein-energy malnutrition). 39 children were lost to follow-up. The childrens parents were farm laborers who lived on large-scale commercial farms in Shamva district. Diarrhea incidence peaked between 13 and 18 months. In 91% of attacks the diarrhea was watery rather than bloody. 31 children had more than 9 diarrhea episodes (high diarrhea frequency). 25 had no more than 4 diarrhea episodes (low diarrhea frequency). There was little difference in the childrens mean weight and mean length from 1 to 30 months of age between high and low diarrhea frequency subjects. The average loss of overall growth per diarrhea episode in the age range 9-23 months was 51 g and 0.18 cm. In the age range of 9-14 months weight loss after the diarrhea episode was 2.3% of body weight and 90% of the sudden weight decline below the childs trend was recovered in 30 days. Weight loss was less than 2.3% among older children. A 2.3% weight loss in an 8 kg child is 180 g. Assuming that diarrhea is responsible for the entire weight loss (about 66 g/episode) the reduction in overall growth is about 120 g (1.5%). The total energy needed to accumulate 120 g is 480 kcal; thus a child would require an additional 2-3 kcal/kg/day (a small amount) to gain 120 g. These findings support the hypothesis that recurrent diarrhea episodes do not induce growth faltering except in a few cases. Inadequate food intake is a more plausible explanation.
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