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      Preventing environmental enteric dysfunction through improved water, sanitation and hygiene: an opportunity for stunting reduction in developing countries

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          Abstract

          In 2011, one in every four (26%) children under 5 years of age worldwide was stunted. The realization that most stunting cannot be explained by poor diet or by diarrhoea, nor completely reversed by optimized diet and reduced diarrhoea has led to the hypothesis that a primary underlying cause of stunting is subclinical gut disease. Essentially, ingested microbes set in motion two overlapping and interacting pathways that result in linear growth impairment. Firstly, partial villous atrophy results in a reduced absorptive surface area and loss of digestive enzymes. This in turn results in maldigestion and malabsorption of much needed nutrients. Secondly, microbes and their products make the gut leaky, allowing luminal contents to translocate into systemic circulation. This creates a condition of chronic immune activation, which (i) diverts nutrient resources towards the metabolically expensive business of infection fighting rather than growth; (ii) suppresses the growth hormone‐IGF axis and inhibits bone growth, leading to growth impairment; and (iii) causes further damage to the intestinal mucosa thereby exacerbating the problem. As such, the unhygienic environments in which infants and young children live and grow must contribute to, if not be the overriding cause of, this environmental enteric dysfunction. We suggest that a package of baby‐WASH interventions (sanitation and water improvement, handwashing with soap, ensuring a clean play and infant feeding environment and food hygiene) that interrupt specific pathways through which feco‐oral transmission occurs in the first two years of a child's life may be central to global stunting reduction efforts.

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          Most cited references72

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          Maternal and child undernutrition and overweight in low-income and middle-income countries

          The Lancet, 382(9890), 427-451
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            Evidence-based interventions for improvement of maternal and child nutrition: what can be done and at what cost?

            The Lancet, 382(9890), 452-477
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              Undernutrition as an underlying cause of child deaths associated with diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria, and measles.

              Previous analyses derived the relative risk (RR) of dying as a result of low weight-for-age and calculated the proportion of child deaths worldwide attributable to underweight. The objectives were to examine whether the risk of dying because of underweight varies by cause of death and to estimate the fraction of deaths by cause attributable to underweight. Data were obtained from investigators of 10 cohort studies with both weight-for-age category ( -1 SD) and cause of death information. All 10 studies contributed information on weight-for-age and risk of diarrhea, pneumonia, and all-cause mortality; however, only 6 studies contributed information on deaths because of measles, and only 3 studies contributed information on deaths because of malaria or fever. With use of weighted random effects models, we related the log mortality rate by cause and anthropometric status in each study to derive cause-specific RRs of dying because of undernutrition. Prevalences of each weight-for-age category were obtained from analyses of 310 national nutrition surveys. With use of the RR and prevalence information, we then calculated the fraction of deaths by cause attributable to undernutrition. The RR of mortality because of low weight-for-age was elevated for each cause of death and for all-cause mortality. Overall, 52.5% of all deaths in young children were attributable to undernutrition, varying from 44.8% for deaths because of measles to 60.7% for deaths because of diarrhea. A significant proportion of deaths in young children worldwide is attributable to low weight-for-age, and efforts to reduce malnutrition should be a policy priority.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Matern Child Nutr
                Matern Child Nutr
                10.1111/(ISSN)1740-8709
                MCN
                Maternal & Child Nutrition
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                1740-8695
                1740-8709
                06 November 2015
                May 2016
                : 12
                : Suppl Suppl 1 ( doiID: 10.1111/mcn.2016.12.issue-S1 )
                : 106-120
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Zvitambo Institute for Maternal and Child Health Research HarareZimbabwe
                [ 2 ]Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore Maryland 21205USA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ]Correspondence: Mduduzi N. N. Mbuya, Zvitambo Institute for Maternal and Child Health Research, 16 Lauchlan Ave, Meyrick Park, Harare, Zimbabwe. E‐mail: mmbuya@ 123456zvitambo.co.zw
                Article
                MCN12220 MCN-05-15-IR-1530.R1
                10.1111/mcn.12220
                5019251
                26542185
                63ae7d6d-c306-497d-994c-e78717e75d14
                © 2016 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 26 May 2015
                : 27 July 2015
                : 18 August 2015
                Page count
                Pages: 15
                Funding
                Funded by: UK Department for International Development/Zimbabwe
                Award ID: AG 201 854–101
                Funded by: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
                Award ID: OPP1021542
                Categories
                Review Article
                Stop Stunting in South Asia. Improving Child Feeding, Women's Nutrition and Household Sanitation. This supplement was funded and made open access by UNICEF Regional Office for South Asia
                Review Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                mcn12220
                May 2016
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:4.9.4 mode:remove_FC converted:12.09.2016

                stunting,nutrition,disease,infant and child nutrition,early growth,sanitation

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