Reid R M
Department of Anthropology, University of Louisville, KY 40292.
Med Anthropol. 1992 Jan;13(4):337-51. doi: 10.1080/01459740.1992.9966056.
Geophagia, the eating of dirt, usually clay, has been recorded in every region of the world both as idiosyncratic behavior of isolated individuals and as culturally prescribed behavior of particular societies. The behavior has long been viewed as pathological by the medical profession, and it has been claimed to be both a cause and a consequence of anemia. While there is now reason to believe that the consumption of some clays may interfere with the absorption of elemental iron, zinc, and potassium, there is little evidence for the position that geophagia, especially its culturally prescribed form, is caused by anemia. These and other maladaptive consequences of clay consumption may be offset by the adaptive value of its antidiarrheal, detoxification, and mineral supplementation potentials.
食土癖,即食用泥土(通常是黏土)的行为,在世界各个地区都有记载,既表现为个别个体的特殊行为,也表现为特定社会文化规定的行为。长期以来,医学界一直将这种行为视为病态,并且有人声称它既是贫血的一个原因,也是贫血的一个后果。虽然现在有理由相信食用某些黏土可能会干扰铁、锌和钾等元素的吸收,但几乎没有证据支持食土癖(尤其是其文化规定形式)是由贫血引起的这一观点。食用黏土的这些以及其他不良后果可能会被其止泻、解毒和补充矿物质的潜在适应价值所抵消。