Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo

The etiology of kwashiorkor remains enigmatic and longitudinal studies examining potential causes of kwashiorkor are scarce. Using historical, longitudinal study data from the rural area of Bwamanda, Democratic Republic of Congo, we investigated the potential causal association between diet and the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hallgeir Kismul, Jan Van den Broeck, Torleif Markussen Lunde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/350.pdf
_version_ 1797419406446297088
author Hallgeir Kismul
Jan Van den Broeck
Torleif Markussen Lunde
author_facet Hallgeir Kismul
Jan Van den Broeck
Torleif Markussen Lunde
author_sort Hallgeir Kismul
collection DOAJ
description The etiology of kwashiorkor remains enigmatic and longitudinal studies examining potential causes of kwashiorkor are scarce. Using historical, longitudinal study data from the rural area of Bwamanda, Democratic Republic of Congo, we investigated the potential causal association between diet and the development of kwashiorkor in 5 657 preschool children followed 3-monthly during 15 months. We compared dietary risk factors for kwashiorkor with those of marasmus. Kwashiorkor was diagnosed as pitting oedema of the ankles; marasmus as abnormal visibility of skeletal structures and palpable wasting of the gluteus muscle. A 24-h recall was administered 3-monthly to record the consumption of the 41 locally most frequent food items. We specified Hanley–Miettinen smooth-in-time risk models containing potential causal factors, including food items, special meals prepared for the child, breastfeeding, disease status, nutritional status, birth rank, age, season and number of meals. Bayesian Information Criteria identified the most plausible causal model of why some children developed kwashiorkor. In a descriptive analysis of the diet at the last dietary assessment prior to development of kwashiorkor, the diet of children who developed kwashiorkor was characterized by low consumption of sweet potatoes, papaya and “other vegetables” [0.0% , 2.3% (95% CI [0.4, 12.1]) and 2.3% (95% CI [0.4, 12.1])] in comparison with children who did not develop kwashiorkor [6.8% (95% CI [6.4, 7.2]), 15.5% (95% CI [15, 16.1]) and 15.1% (95% CI [14.6, 15.7])] or children who developed marasmus [4.5% (95% CI [2.6, 7.5]) 11.8% (95% CI [8.5, 16.0]) and 17.6% (95% CI [13.7, 22.5])]. Sweet potatoes and papayas have high β-carotene content and so may some of “the other vegetables”. We found that a risk model containing an age function, length/height-for age Z-score, consumption of sweet potatoes, papaya or other vegetables, duration of this consumption and its interaction term, was the most plausible model. Among children aged 10–42 months, the risk of developing kwashiorkor increased with longer non-consumption of these foods. The analysis was repeated with only children who developed marasmus as the reference series, yielding similar results. Our study supports that β-carotene may play an important role in the protection against kwashiorkor development.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T06:46:54Z
format Article
id doaj.art-0abe523b7abb45a191be9b35536a3179
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2167-8359
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T06:46:54Z
publishDate 2014-04-01
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format Article
series PeerJ
spelling doaj.art-0abe523b7abb45a191be9b35536a31792023-12-03T10:33:53ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-04-012e35010.7717/peerj.350350Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR CongoHallgeir Kismul0Jan Van den Broeck1Torleif Markussen Lunde2Centre for International Health, University of Bergen, , NorwayCentre for International Health, University of Bergen, , NorwayCentre for International Health, University of Bergen, , NorwayThe etiology of kwashiorkor remains enigmatic and longitudinal studies examining potential causes of kwashiorkor are scarce. Using historical, longitudinal study data from the rural area of Bwamanda, Democratic Republic of Congo, we investigated the potential causal association between diet and the development of kwashiorkor in 5 657 preschool children followed 3-monthly during 15 months. We compared dietary risk factors for kwashiorkor with those of marasmus. Kwashiorkor was diagnosed as pitting oedema of the ankles; marasmus as abnormal visibility of skeletal structures and palpable wasting of the gluteus muscle. A 24-h recall was administered 3-monthly to record the consumption of the 41 locally most frequent food items. We specified Hanley–Miettinen smooth-in-time risk models containing potential causal factors, including food items, special meals prepared for the child, breastfeeding, disease status, nutritional status, birth rank, age, season and number of meals. Bayesian Information Criteria identified the most plausible causal model of why some children developed kwashiorkor. In a descriptive analysis of the diet at the last dietary assessment prior to development of kwashiorkor, the diet of children who developed kwashiorkor was characterized by low consumption of sweet potatoes, papaya and “other vegetables” [0.0% , 2.3% (95% CI [0.4, 12.1]) and 2.3% (95% CI [0.4, 12.1])] in comparison with children who did not develop kwashiorkor [6.8% (95% CI [6.4, 7.2]), 15.5% (95% CI [15, 16.1]) and 15.1% (95% CI [14.6, 15.7])] or children who developed marasmus [4.5% (95% CI [2.6, 7.5]) 11.8% (95% CI [8.5, 16.0]) and 17.6% (95% CI [13.7, 22.5])]. Sweet potatoes and papayas have high β-carotene content and so may some of “the other vegetables”. We found that a risk model containing an age function, length/height-for age Z-score, consumption of sweet potatoes, papaya or other vegetables, duration of this consumption and its interaction term, was the most plausible model. Among children aged 10–42 months, the risk of developing kwashiorkor increased with longer non-consumption of these foods. The analysis was repeated with only children who developed marasmus as the reference series, yielding similar results. Our study supports that β-carotene may play an important role in the protection against kwashiorkor development.https://peerj.com/articles/350.pdfMalnutritionKwashiorkorMarasmusFood itemsβ-carotenePapaya
spellingShingle Hallgeir Kismul
Jan Van den Broeck
Torleif Markussen Lunde
Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo
PeerJ
Malnutrition
Kwashiorkor
Marasmus
Food items
β-carotene
Papaya
title Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo
title_full Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo
title_fullStr Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo
title_full_unstemmed Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo
title_short Diet and kwashiorkor: a prospective study from rural DR Congo
title_sort diet and kwashiorkor a prospective study from rural dr congo
topic Malnutrition
Kwashiorkor
Marasmus
Food items
β-carotene
Papaya
url https://peerj.com/articles/350.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT hallgeirkismul dietandkwashiorkoraprospectivestudyfromruraldrcongo
AT janvandenbroeck dietandkwashiorkoraprospectivestudyfromruraldrcongo
AT torleifmarkussenlunde dietandkwashiorkoraprospectivestudyfromruraldrcongo