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Esophageal Atresia: Nutritional Status and Energy Metabolism to Maximize Growth Outcome

Authors :
Gloria Pelizzo
Francesca Destro
Giorgio Giuseppe Orlando Selvaggio
Luciano Maestri
Margherita Roveri
Alessandra Bosetti
Barbara Borsani
Erica Pendezza
Milena Meroni
Andrea Pansini
Enrico La Pergola
Giovanna Riccipetitoni
Annalisa De Silvestri
Hellas Cena
Valeria Calcaterra
Source :
Children, Vol 7, Iss 11, p 228 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Background: Long-term negative sequelae of esophageal atresia (EA) may induce poor growth and impaired nutritional status in childhood. We describe the nutritional profile and energy metabolism of children with repaired EA to identify malnutrition risk factors and optimize growth management. Methods: Twenty-one children (>4 years) were included, and anthropometric measurements, nutritional assessment, and energy metabolism were considered. The subjects were defined as undernourished if they met BMI < −2 standard deviation (SD). To grade undernutrition, we defined the prevalence of underweight, stunting, and wasting (cut-off level of p < 0.01). Wasting was noted in 28.6% of patients, of these 5 children were undernourished (p < 0.001) and stunting was noticed in only one patient with malnutrition (p = 0.5). Resting expenditure energy (REE) was lower in undernourished subjects compared to subjects with adequate nutritional status (p < 0.001). Malnutrition was associated to: type of EA (p = 0.003, particularly type A and C); intervention including deferred anastomosis due to long-gap repair (p = 0.04) with/or without jejunostomy (p = 0.02), gastric pull-up (p = 0.04), primary anastomosis (p = 0.04), pyloromyotomy in long-gap (p < 0.01); small for gestational age condition (p = 0.001). Conclusions: undernutrition risk factors, beyond the type of malformation, surgery, and perinatal factors, must be early considered to personalize nutritional programming. Energy metabolism is important to monitor the nutritional requirements. The management of nutritional issues is surely a contributory factor able to counteract the poor growth of children with EA.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22279067
Volume :
7
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Children
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.87615d8f51641aabf9c1f32b369224f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/children7110228