Busert Laura K, Neuman Melissa, Rehfuess Eva A, Dulal Sophiya, Harthan Jayne, Chaube Shiva Shankar, Bhandari Bishnu, Costello Harry, Costello Anthony, Manandhar Dharma S, Saville Naomi M
Institute for Medical Informatics, Biometry, and Epidemiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Munich, Germany;
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom; and.
J Nutr. 2016 Jul;146(7):1387-93. doi: 10.3945/jn.115.220137. Epub 2016 Jun 15.
Recent research has highlighted the need for additional studies on the nutrition input required to stabilize growth.
Our objective was to examine the association between dietary diversity and conditional growth in children aged 0-89 mo.
We analyzed cohort data from 529 mothers and children living in a remote and food-insecure region in the mountains of Nepal. Children were aged 0-59 mo at baseline and were followed up after 9 and 29 mo. Conditional growth was calculated as the deviation from the expected height-for-age difference (HAD) trajectory based on previous measures of HAD and the pattern of growth in the population. Dietary diversity was assessed with the use of a count of the foods consumed from 7 food groups in the previous 7 d. The association between dietary diversity and conditional growth during the 2 follow-up periods (of 9 and 20 mo, respectively) was estimated with the use of ordinary least-squares regressions.
Prevalence of stunting and absolute height deficits was very high and increased over the course of the study. At the last measurement (age range 29-89 mo), 76.5% were stunted and the mean ± SD HAD was -11.7 ± 4.6 cm. Dietary diversity was associated positively with conditional growth in the later (May 2012-December 2013) but not the earlier (July 2011-May 2012) growth period. Children's ages ranged from 0 to 59 mo in July 2011, 9 to 69 mo in May 2012, and 29 to 89 mo in December 2013. After adjustment, increasing the dietary diversity by one food group was associated with a 0.09 cm (95% CI: 0.00, 0.17 cm) increase in conditional growth in the second growth period.
Increasing dietary diversity for children reduces the risk of stunting and improves growth after growth faltering. Future efforts should be directed at enabling families in food-insecure areas to feed their children a more diverse diet.
近期研究强调了开展更多关于稳定生长所需营养投入研究的必要性。
我们的目的是研究0至89月龄儿童饮食多样性与条件性生长之间的关联。
我们分析了来自尼泊尔山区一个偏远且粮食不安全地区的529名母亲和儿童的队列数据。儿童在基线时年龄为0至59月龄,并在9个月和29个月后进行随访。条件性生长被计算为基于先前年龄别身高差值(HAD)测量值和人群生长模式与预期年龄别身高差值轨迹的偏差。饮食多样性通过对过去7天内从7个食物组中摄入的食物进行计数来评估。使用普通最小二乘法回归估计在两个随访期(分别为9个月和20个月)内饮食多样性与条件性生长之间的关联。
发育迟缓患病率和绝对身高不足非常高,且在研究过程中有所增加。在最后一次测量时(年龄范围为29至89月龄),76.5%的儿童发育迟缓,平均±标准差HAD为-11.7±4.6厘米。饮食多样性在后期(2012年5月至2013年12月)而非早期(2011年7月至2012年5月)生长阶段与条件性生长呈正相关。2011年7月儿童年龄范围为0至59月龄,2012年5月为9至69月龄,2013年12月为29至89月龄。调整后,在第二个生长阶段,饮食多样性增加一个食物组与条件性生长增加0.09厘米(95%CI:0.00,0.17厘米)相关。
增加儿童饮食多样性可降低发育迟缓风险,并在生长发育迟缓后改善生长情况。未来的努力应致力于使粮食不安全地区的家庭能够为其子女提供更多样化的饮食。