Johnson Casey R, Fischer Philip R, Thacher Thomas D, Topazian Mark D, Bourassa Megan W, Combs Gerald F
1 Mayo Clinic School of Medicine, Rochester, USA.
2 Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, USA.
Nutr Health. 2019 Jun;25(2):127-151. doi: 10.1177/0260106019830847. Epub 2019 Feb 24.
Thiamin deficiency is a major public health concern in several low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)-current attention to the problem is lacking.
This review discusses prevalence of thiamin insufficiency and thiamin-deficiency disorders (TDDs) in LMICs, outlines programmatic experience with thiamin interventions, and offers recommendations to improve public-health and research attention to thiamin in LMICs.
Thiamin insufficiency, i.e. low-blood-thiamin status, is endemic among several Southeast Asian countries: Cambodia (70-100% of infants and 27-100% of reproductive-age women); Laos (13% of hospitalized infants); Thailand (16-25% of children and 30% of elderly adults). Thiamin deficiency accounts for up to 45% of under-5 deaths in Cambodia, 34% of infant deaths in Laos, and 17% of infant deaths in Myanmar. Deficiency also exists in Africa, Asia, and the Americas, but these instances have typically been isolated. Exclusively breastfed infants of thiamin-deficient mothers are at highest risk for TDD and related death. Intervention strategies that have been employed to combat thiamin deficiency include food processing, fortification, supplementation, dietary diversification, and dietary behaviors, all of which have shown varying levels of effectiveness.
We recommend universal thiamin-fortification of context-specific staple-foods in LMICs as a promising solution, as well as thiamin supplementation, particularly for pregnant and lactating women. Food processing regulations, dietary diversification, and modification of dietary behaviors to increase consumption of thiamin-rich foods may provide benefits in some circumstances, especially in countries without universal fortification programs or in populations dependent on food aid.
硫胺素缺乏是几个低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的一个主要公共卫生问题,目前对该问题缺乏关注。
本综述讨论了低收入和中等收入国家硫胺素不足和硫胺素缺乏症(TDDs)的流行情况,概述了硫胺素干预措施的项目经验,并提出了改善低收入和中等收入国家对硫胺素的公共卫生和研究关注度的建议。
硫胺素不足,即血液中硫胺素水平低,在几个东南亚国家呈地方性流行:柬埔寨(70%-100%的婴儿和27%-100%的育龄妇女);老挝(13%的住院婴儿);泰国(16%-25%的儿童和30%的老年人)。硫胺素缺乏在柬埔寨占5岁以下儿童死亡人数的45%,在老挝占婴儿死亡人数的34%,在缅甸占婴儿死亡人数的17%。非洲、亚洲和美洲也存在缺乏情况,但这些情况通常是孤立的。硫胺素缺乏母亲的纯母乳喂养婴儿患TDD和相关死亡的风险最高。为防治硫胺素缺乏而采用的干预策略包括食品加工、强化、补充、饮食多样化和饮食行为,所有这些策略都显示出不同程度的有效性。
我们建议在低收入和中等收入国家对特定的主食进行普遍硫胺素强化,这是一个有前景的解决方案,同时建议补充硫胺素,特别是对孕妇和哺乳期妇女。食品加工法规、饮食多样化以及改变饮食行为以增加富含硫胺素食物的消费在某些情况下可能有益,特别是在没有普遍强化计划的国家或依赖食品援助的人群中。