Alexandre Márcia Almeida Araújo, Benzecry Silvana Gomes, Siqueira Andre Machado, Vitor-Silva Sheila, Melo Gisely Cardoso, Monteiro Wuelton Marcelo, Leite Heitor Pons, Lacerda Marcus Vinícius Guimarães, Alecrim Maria das Graças Costa
Gerência de Malaria, Fundação de Medicina Tropical Doutor Heitor Vieira Dourado, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil; Programa de Pós-graduação em Medicina Tropical, Universidade do Estado do Amazonas, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil.
Programa de Pós-graduação em Medicina Tropical, Universidade do Estado do Amazonas, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil; Department of Pediatrics, Discipline of Nutrition and Metabolism, Federal University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015 Apr 30;9(4):e0003743. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003743. eCollection 2015 Apr.
The relationship between malaria and undernutrition is controversial and complex. Synergistic associations between malnutrition and malaria morbidity and mortality have been suggested, as well as undernutrition being protective against infection, while other studies found no association. We sought to evaluate the relationship between the number of malaria episodes and nutritional statuses in a cohort of children below 15 years of age living in a rural community in the Brazilian Amazon.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Following a baseline survey of clinical, malaria and nutritional assessment including anthropometry measurements and hemoglobin concentration, 202 children ranging from 1 month to 14 years of age were followed for one year through passive case detection for malaria episodes. After follow-up, all children were assessed again in order to detect changes in nutritional indicators associated with malaria infection. We also examined the risk of presenting malaria episodes during follow-up according to presence of stunting at baseline. Children who suffered malaria episodes during follow-up presented worse anthropometric parameters values during this period. The main change was a reduction of the linear growth velocity, associated with both the number of episodes and how close the last or only malaria episode and the second anthropometric assessment were. Changes were also observed for indices associated with chronic changes, such as weight-for-age and BMI-for-age, which conversely, were more frequently observed in children with the last or only episode occurring between 6 and 12 months preceding the second nutritional assessment survey. Children with inadequate height-for-age at baseline (Z-score < -2) presented lower risk of suffering malaria episodes during follow-up as assessed by both the log-rank test (p =0.057) and the multivariable Cox-proportional hazards regression (Hazard Ratio = 0.31, 95%CI [0.10; 0.99] p=0.049).
Malaria was associated with impaired nutritional status amongst children in an endemic area of the Western Brazilian Amazon where P. vivax predominates. Our data all supports that the association presents differential effects for each age group, suggesting distinct pathophysiology pathways. We were also able to demonstrate that undernourishment at baseline was protective to malaria during follow-up. These findings support an intriguing interaction between these conditions in the rural Amazon and the need for a more integrative approach by health systems in endemic areas.
疟疾与营养不良之间的关系存在争议且复杂。有研究表明营养不良与疟疾的发病率和死亡率之间存在协同关联,同时也有研究认为营养不良对感染具有保护作用,而其他研究则未发现两者之间存在关联。我们试图评估巴西亚马逊地区一个农村社区15岁以下儿童队列中疟疾发作次数与营养状况之间的关系。
方法/主要发现:在对包括人体测量和血红蛋白浓度在内的临床、疟疾和营养评估进行基线调查后,通过被动病例检测对202名年龄在1个月至14岁之间的儿童进行了为期一年的疟疾发作跟踪。随访结束后,对所有儿童再次进行评估,以检测与疟疾感染相关的营养指标变化。我们还根据基线时是否存在发育迟缓情况,研究了随访期间出现疟疾发作的风险。在随访期间患疟疾的儿童在此期间的人体测量参数值较差。主要变化是线性生长速度下降,这与发作次数以及最后一次或仅有的一次疟疾发作与第二次人体测量评估的时间间隔有关。与慢性变化相关的指标,如年龄别体重和年龄别BMI,也观察到了变化,相反,这些变化在第二次营养评估调查前6至12个月内发生最后一次或仅有的一次发作的儿童中更为常见。通过对数秩检验(p = 0.057)和多变量Cox比例风险回归(风险比 = 0.31,95%CI [0.10; 0.99],p = 0.049)评估,基线时年龄别身高不足(Z评分 < -2)的儿童在随访期间患疟疾发作的风险较低。
在巴西亚马逊西部间日疟原虫占主导的疟疾流行地区,疟疾与儿童营养状况受损有关。我们的数据均支持这种关联在每个年龄组中呈现出不同的影响,表明存在不同的病理生理途径。我们还能够证明基线时的营养不良在随访期间对疟疾具有保护作用。这些发现支持了亚马逊农村地区这些疾病之间有趣的相互作用,以及流行地区卫生系统需要采取更综合方法的必要性。