Hodge L G, Dufour D L
Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Boulder 80309-0233.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1991 Jan;84(1):35-41. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330840104.
This paper reports measurements of weight and recumbent length for a cross-sectional sample of 149 Shipibo infants and children between birth and 35.99 months of age from eight villages in the Peruvian Amazon Basin. The Shipibo are an Amerindian population experiencing a period of local environmental disruption and rapid cultural change. Compared with the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) references values, Shipibo children are smaller and shorter than American children. The differences are least at birth. Deficits in linear growth begin between 3 and 6 months of age and continue through 35.99 months of age. Weight-for-length ratios are generally adequate compared to the NCHS values in all age groups. This pattern of growth is similar to that reported for non-Amerindians in many developing countries and is assumed to represent a pattern of growth under mild-to-moderate undernutrition. High infant mortality rates suggest that an interaction of suboptimal nutrition and infectious diseases is contributing to the pattern of growth retardation seen; however, genetic differences cannot yet be discounted.
本文报告了对秘鲁亚马逊盆地八个村庄149名希皮博族婴儿和儿童(年龄在出生至35.99个月之间)的横断面样本进行体重和身长测量的结果。希皮博族是一个正在经历当地环境破坏和快速文化变迁时期的美洲印第安人群体。与美国国家卫生统计中心(NCHS)的参考值相比,希皮博族儿童比美国儿童体型更小、身高更矮。出生时差异最小。线性生长不足始于3至6个月龄,并持续至35.99个月龄。与NCHS值相比,所有年龄组的身长体重比总体上是充足的。这种生长模式与许多发展中国家非美洲印第安人的报告相似,被认为代表了轻度至中度营养不良情况下的生长模式。高婴儿死亡率表明,营养欠佳与传染病的相互作用导致了所见的生长发育迟缓模式;然而,遗传差异也不能被排除。