1. Growth and Body Composition of Peruvian Infants in a Periurban Setting
- Author
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Laura E. Caulfield, Zulema Leon, Lora Iannotti, and Nelly Zavaleta
- Subjects
Male ,Aging ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Body size ,Article ,Reference Values ,Peru ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Body Size ,Humans ,Body Weights and Measures ,Longitudinal Studies ,Poverty ,Growth Disorders ,Sex Characteristics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Extramural ,Infant, Newborn ,Urban Health ,Infant ,Anthropometry ,medicine.disease ,Infant newborn ,Diet ,Malnutrition ,Geography ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Reference values ,Body Composition ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Underweight ,medicine.symptom ,Food Science ,Demography ,Urban health - Abstract
Background Previous growth studies of Peruvian children have featured high stunting rates and limited information about body composition. Objective We aimed to characterize anthropometric measures of Peruvian infants 0 to 12 months of age in relation to the international growth references and biological, environmental, and socioeconomic factors. Methods Infants ( n = 232) were followed longitudinally from birth through 12 months of age from a prenatal zinc supplementation trial conducted in Lima, Peru, between 1995 and 1997. Anthropometric measures of growth and body composition were obtained at enrollment from mothers and monthly through 1 year of age from infants. Weekly morbidity and dietary intake surveillance was carried out during the second half of infancy. Results The prevalence rates of stunting, underweight, and wasting did not exceed 4% based on the World Health Organization growth references. Infants of mothers from high-altitude regions had larger chest circumference ( p = .006) and greater length ( p = .06) by 12 months. Significant predictors of growth and body composition throughout infancy were age, sex, anthropometric measurements at birth, breastfeeding, maternal anthropometric measurements, primiparity, prevalence of diarrhea among children, and the altitude of the region of maternal origin. No associations were found for maternal education, asset ownership, or sanitation and hygiene factors. Conclusions Peruvian infants in this urban setting had lower rates of stunting than expected. Proximal and familial conditions influenced growth throughout infancy.
- Published
- 2009
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