Exploring the Nutritional Ecology of Stunting: New Approaches to an Old Problem
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. What’s the Problem?
4. A Complex Global Health Context: Stunting, is it Only Undernutrition?
5. Conundrum: What Are We Talking About?
6. Public Health Nutrition: The Challenge of a “One-Size-Fits-All” Approach
7. The External and Internal Nutritional Ecology of Stunting
- What is the biology of stunting?
- (a)
- What is the role of intersecting biological systems, e.g., neuroendocrine, GI/metabolic, inflammatory, etc.?
- (b)
- What is the relationship between wasting and stunting?
- Why do some children who are wasted/“malnourished” become stunted while others do not?
- Wasting is associated with poor linear growth, but the effects of remediation on growth are mixed [33].
- Why do some children who are born small-for-gestational age (SGA) become stunted while others do not?
- (a)
- 20% of stunting and 30% of wasting was reported to have prenatal origins [34].
- Is there a trigger that causes children to go down this path, and if so, what is it?
- (a)
- Specific nutrient (single or multiple) deficits?
- (b)
- Inflammation?
- (c)
- Body habitus and related metabolic factors: Fat mass and related metabolomics mediated by compounds such as leptin?
- (d)
- Is stunting a reflection of a chronic condition? Is there a role for infection? NCDs?
- (e)
- Obesity: role of maternal body mass? Children who are stunted are susceptible to obesity but children who are obese do not appear to be susceptible to stunting. Is there something to be learned from our evolving understanding of the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD) paradigm?
- What is the role of genetics, either in terms of prediction or adaptation to environmental conditions?
- Assessment: What is the value of anthropometry beyond an observation of something gone wrong? How can we better translate what we know about the biology of stunting and its causes to better assessment approaches?
- (a)
- It has been suggested that mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) may be an indicator of the metabolic sequelae associated with relevant changes in body compositions and the relationship to stunting [35]. Is this a viable hypothesis?
- (b)
- What biomarkers should we employ to increase our precision both in terms of diagnosis and interventions clinically, in the field and at scale?
8. Differences Between Wasting and Stunting: Beyond a Definition of “Malnutrition”
- Type A: “a deficit in weight-for-height, represents a fairly acute state of malnutrition where growth, as shown by height, has been reasonably satisfactory until some acute episode, infective or nutritional, supervenes.”
- Type B: “a deficit in height-for-age, undernutrition over a long period has caused a retardation in linear growth.”
- Despite recent progress, there is a persistent stunting prevalence of 20%–25% among children globally;
- Stark regional differences in the prevalence of stunting continue to exist, which may reflect the local external ecology perhaps as much or more than the biology;
- The utility of stunting as a public health “trigger” for initiation of interventions may be limited due to the lack of fundamental understanding of its biology;
- In a world of exploding nutrition-related NCDs, the lack of specificity of nutritional interventions and the role of early life exposure to the development of these chronic diseases raises concerns about the clinical or public health utility of current interventions to address stunting (i.e., is it simply a matter of too much or too little food?);
- Limitations of current biomarkers to distinguish between specific nutrition-related problems and other potential causes or correlates of stunting.
9. Principles in Nutritional Assessment: How Can We Determine the Role of Nutrition in Stunting?
- Support the safe and effective application of existing standards of clinical care, or to establish new standards;
- Provide the requisite data to support the development and evaluation of programs, policies, and guidance;
- Ensure the validity and reliability of research data and their appropriate translation.
- Public health indicators;
- Bio-indicators;
- Biomarkers.
- (1)
- Genetics: underlying adaptation to adverse environments;
- (2)
- Environmental adjustment to low oxygen pressure due to altitude above sea level and contaminated environments;
- (3)
- Neuroendocrine control of bone health/linear growth;
- (4)
- Intrauterine growth retardation;
- (5)
- Poor infant feeding practices, particularly breastfeeding;
- (6)
- Maternal (e.g., HIV) and/or child infections;
- (7)
- Gastrointestinal disorders [14] affecting:
- Gastrointestinal function;
- Microbiome composition and function;
- Nutrient absorption;
- (8)
- Interactions between lean body mass and fat mass;
- (9)
- Inflammation and the immune system.
10. Conclusions
- Stunting: what is it (nutritional, physiological, genetic, environmental)? How do we know and how can that knowledge be collected to inform public policy?
- If nutritional, what nutrients (protein, specific amino acids, calories, zinc)?
- ○
- What is the pattern of nutrients involved in those systems controlling linear growth (i.e., the “nutriome” of growth) and how can we best understand their normal interactions and what happens during fluctuations (e.g., poor status of either single or multiple nutrients)?
- How do we identify/measure stunting (anthropometry versus sensitive and specific biomarkers) clinically and in field settings, and interpret those results in the context of an increasingly complex global health context?
- Is stunting amenable to remediation?
- ○
- Remediation of growth deficits, is catch-up growth possible?
- ○
- If catch-up growth is possible, is it physiologically useful?
- ○
- How do we define stunting?
- ○
- What is the primary cause? What is the nature of the relationships between stunting and its associated conditions (e.g., neurodevelopment, development of NCDs, etc.)? Are the relationships causative or correlative?
- ○
- Neurodevelopmental outcomes: these are less clear. Neurodevelopment presents a daunting array of complications, not least of which is that, depending on when and for how long the insult(s) occur, there are critical periods beyond which remediation is not possible.
- Long-term health: obesity and other NCDs:
- ○
- What are the biological connections?
- ○
- Is stunting a reliable predictor?
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Disclaimer
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Raiten, D.J.; Bremer, A.A. Exploring the Nutritional Ecology of Stunting: New Approaches to an Old Problem. Nutrients 2020, 12, 371. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020371
Raiten DJ, Bremer AA. Exploring the Nutritional Ecology of Stunting: New Approaches to an Old Problem. Nutrients. 2020; 12(2):371. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020371
Chicago/Turabian StyleRaiten, Daniel J., and Andrew A. Bremer. 2020. "Exploring the Nutritional Ecology of Stunting: New Approaches to an Old Problem" Nutrients 12, no. 2: 371. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020371
APA StyleRaiten, D. J., & Bremer, A. A. (2020). Exploring the Nutritional Ecology of Stunting: New Approaches to an Old Problem. Nutrients, 12(2), 371. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12020371