Title: Protein Energy Malnutrition
1Protein Energy Malnutrition
- Cindy Howard, MD, MPHTM
- Associate Director
- Center for Global Pediatrics
- University of Minnesota
- November 8, 2008
2Time Magazine, August, 2008
3The percentage of under five mortality
worldwide caused in part by protein energy
malnutrition is estimated at
4Definitions
5Millennium Development Goals (MDG) 2000 United
Nations
- 1. Eradicate extreme poverty hunger
- 2. Achieve universal primary education
- 3. Promote gender equality and empower women
- 4. Reduce child mortality
- 5. Improve maternal health
- 6. Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, other diseases
- 7. Ensure environmental sustainability
- 8. Develop a global partnership for development
6Define PEM
- Underweight weight for age lt 80 expected
- Marasmus weight for age lt 60 expected
- Kwashiorkor weight for age lt 80 edema
- Marasmic kwashiorkor wt/age lt60 edema
-
- Wasting weight for height
- Stunting height for age
- SAM severe acute malnutrition
7Underweight
- Define weight-for-age less 80 expected
- Encompasses both wasting and stunting
- Most global data
- High correlation with stunting
- Prevalence directly describes the magnitude of
the problem of growth faltering and stunting in
young children - 130 million children under the age of five years
8Marasmus
- Weight for age lt 60 expected
- No edema
- Often stunted
- Hungry, relatively easier to feed
- CFR20-30
9Kwashiorkor(Edematous Malnutrition)
- Underweight with edema
- Irritable, difficult to feed
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Highest mortality 50 to 60
10STUNTING
- Height for age less than 90 expected
11Severe Acute Malnutrition SAM
- Weight-for-height of 70 (extreme wasting)
- Presence of bilateral pitting edema of
nutritional origin, edematous malnutrition - Mid-upper-arm circumference of less than 110 mm
in children age 1-5 years old
12Complications of SAM include
- ARI
- Diarrhea
- Gram negative septicemia
- Poor feeding
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- All of the above
13Complications of SAM
- ARI
- Diarrhea
- Gram negative septicemia
- Poor feeding
- Electrolyte abnormalities
14TREATMENT of Undernutrition
- Varies depending on the type of malnutrition
- Immediate cause
- lack of food, lack of appropriate foods for age,
lack of protein, maternal death, acute or chronic
infection. - Resources available
- Management protocols capable of reducing CFR to 1
to 5
15The first step in the treatment of SAM is
toprevent and/or treat hypoglycemia.
16Ten Steps to Recoveryin Malnourished
ChildrenAshworth A, Jackson A, Khanum S
Schofield C1996
THE WHO TEN STEPS
17Steps 1 and 2
- Prevent/treat HYPOGLYCEMIA
- Prevent/treat HYPOTHERMIA
- KEY is frequent feeding every two hrs night/day
- Skin to skin contact with parent, warm lamp,
- warm blanket, avoid exposure
18STEP3
- Treat/prevent dehydration
- Give ReSoMaL or comparable oral solution.
- Do not use the standard WHO oral rehydration
salts solution. It contains too much sodium and
too little potassium for severely malnourished
children. - 3. Do not use the IV route except in shock, and
then do so with care to avoid flooding the
circulation and overloading the heart. - 4. Feed through diarrhea, continue breast
feeding
19STEP4
- CORRECT ELECTROLYTE IMBALANCES
- Excessive Na
- Deficient potassium
- Deficient magnesium
-
- Remember Two weeks minimum to correct
- Prepare meals w/o salt
- Do NOT use a diuretic to treat edema
20STEP5
-
- Give to ALL severely malnourished children
- broad-spectrum antibiotic
- measles vaccine to all children gt 6 months.
- Vitamin A
- Mebendazole 100 mg BID x 3 days
- Consider HIV and TB
21STEP6
- CORRECT MICRONUTRIENT DEFICIENCIES
- All severely malnourished children have vitamin
and mineral deficiencies. -
- Recommend Zinc, copper and MV daily
- Vitamin A and folic acid on Day 1
-
- Do NOT give iron until the child has a good
appetite and starts gaining weight (usually
during the second week of treatment).
22STEP7
- Powdered milk, sugar and oil
- May include electrolyte/mineral solution
- Day 1 7
- Low in protein and iron, high in energy
- Small, frequent feeds 130ml/kg div q2
23Rebuild Tissues
Step 8
- Second week
- Advance to 200 ml/kg/day div q 3 to 4 hours
- Advance to local foods peanut butter, beans,
margarine energy dense local foods
24STEP9
- Stimulation, Play and Loving Care
-
- tender, loving care
- structured play and physical activity as soon as
the child is well enough - a cheerful, stimulating environment.
- Encourage mothers involvement
- 90 expected weight for height ready for
discharge
25STEP10
- Preparation for Discharge
Nutritional education Immunization Home
Follow Up
26Treatment of Malnutrition
27Direct causes of death
- Hypoglycemia
- Hypothermia
- Dehydration
- Infection
- Severe anemia
Time Magazine, August, 2008
28Outpatient management
- Malawi, Sudan, Ethiopia
- 2001-2005
- 23,511 severely malnourished children
- 74 treated solely as outpatients
- CFR4.1
- Recovery rates79.4
- Default 11
- Niger, MSF
- 60,000 children with SAM
- 70 outpatient
- CFR5
Lancet, 2006
29Bibliography
- Stunting, Wasting, and Micronutrient Deficiency
Disorders, Laura E. Caulfield, Stephanie A.
Richard, Juan A. Rivera, Philip Musgrove, Robert
E. Black, Disease Control Priorities in
Developing Countries, 2nd edition, 2006,
pages551-567 - Management of Severe Acute Malnutrition in
Children, Steve Collins, Nicky Dent, Paul Binns,
Paluku Bahwere, Kate Sadler, Alistair Hallam,
Lancet, Vol. 368, December 2, 2006, pages
1992-2000. - What works? Interventions for maternal and child
undernutrition and survival. Bhutta ZA, Ahmed T,
Black RE, Cousens S, Dewey K, Giugliani E, Haider
BA, Kirkwood B, Morris SS, Sachdev HP, Shekar M
Maternal and Child Undernutrition Study Group,
Lancet, February 2, 2008. - Ten Steps to Recovery. Child Health Dialogue. 2nd
and 3rd Quarter issues, 10-12. - Guidelines for the Inpatient Treatment of
Severely Malnourished Children Nonserial
PublicationAshworth, A., Khanum, S., Jackson, A.,
Schofield, C. World Health Organization - ISBN-13 9789241546096 ISBN-10
9241546093