Test developed that can help predict if children will have stunted growth due to malnutrition
MedicalXpress Breaking News-and-Events Apr 12, 2020
An international team of researchers has developed a urine test that can be used to predict how well a baby at risk of malnutrition will grow. In their paper published in the journal Science Advances, the group describes how they developed the test and why they believe it can be used to help identify children suffering from malnutrition.
Malnutrition in children is a global problem, and not only in regions where people are starving. Prior research has shown that malnutrition in children can lead to both physical and mental problems as the child grows older. Because of that, health workers have been looking for ways to identify children who might not be getting the proper nutrition they need to grow into healthy adults. Prior research has also shown that children who suffer from malnutrition tend to grow up shorter than they would were they to grow up eating a healthy diet. The researchers with this new effort used that information to develop a urine test that can predict how well a child will grow over the following 6 months.
The work involved collecting monthly urine samples from children in Peru, Tanzania and Bangladesh between the ages of 3 months to 2 years. Each of the children was also measured for body length. The team also did the same with children on healthy diets to serve as a control group. The researchers studied the urine samples and found that malnourished children had lower levels of certain metabolites in their urine than normal. Further study showed that metabolites associated with the Krebs cycle and those associated with the metabolism of tryptophan were most closely tied to body growth during childhood. Deficiencies of both are generally tied to children who do not eat enough protein.
Additional research showed that urine tests that measured the levels of such metabolites in children could be used to identify those who are at risk of malnutrition. The researchers note that identifying children with malnutrition would allow health workers in impoverished areas to see which children needed more resources. The team also notes that they found that many children who were exposed to infectious agents on a frequent basis needed more protein in their diet than normal to prevent becoming malnourished.
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