Stunting May Determine the Severity of Malaria-Associated Anemia in African Children

Author:

Verhoef Hans12,West Clive E.13,Veenemans Jacobien1,Beguin Yves4,Kok Frans J.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Human Nutrition and Epidemiology, Wageningen University, the Netherlands

2. African Medical and Research Foundation, Nairobi, Kenya

3. Department of Gastroenterology, University Medical Centre Nijmegen, the Netherlands

4. Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology, University of Liège, Belgium

Abstract

Objective. Evidence from previous studies that malnourished children are protected against malaria is controversial. In individuals repeatedly exposed to malaria, immunity may develop first against severe disease, then against pyrogens, and last, against parasites. If this is true, this would suggest that reduced immune function that may exist in stunted children exacerbates the severity of malarial signs and symptoms, rather than the occurrence of parasitemia. On the other hand, several studies have suggested that malnourished children are protected to some degree against malaria. Our aim was to evaluate whether observational data support the hypothesis that nutritional inadequacies that cause stunting modify the associations between malaria and hematologic indicators such as hemoglobin concentration and serum concentrations of C-reactive protein and soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR). We showed earlier that increased serum concentrations of these receptors in asymptomatic malaria may be explained, at least in part, by increased erythropoiesis to compensate for malaria-induced hemolysis. Methodology. Community-based cluster survey among Kenyan children aged 2 to 36 months asymptomatic for malaria or anemia (n = 318). Results. When adjusted for age and wasting, the malaria-associated decrease in mean hemoglobin concentration was 8.5 g/L and 15.8 g/L in nonstunted and stunted children, respectively. The malaria-associated increase in geometric mean serum concentrations of sTfR was 1.1-fold and 1.8-fold in nonstunted and stunted children, respectively. The malaria-associated increase in geometric mean serum concentrations of C-reactive protein was 1.4-fold and 2.3-fold in nonstunted and stunted children, respectively. Thus, children with malaria and those who were stunted suffered from more severe anemia and had higher serum concentrations of C-reactive protein and sTfR than would be expected from the combined effect of the 2 working independently. Conclusions. Our results are consistent with the notion that the nutritional inadequacies causing stunting also impair host immunity, thus increasing the degree to which malaria is associated with decreased concentrations of hemoglobin, with increased inflammation, and with increased iron demand in developing erythroblasts. Increased intake of micronutrients may not only reduce stunting and nutritional anemia, but also reduce malaria-associated anemia.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference34 articles.

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2. Waterlow JC. Causes and mechanisms of linear growth retardation (stunting). Eur J Clin Nutr.1994;48(suppl 1):S1–S4

3. Tomkins A. The risk of morbidity in a stunted child. In: Waterlow JC, ed. Linear Growth Retardation in Less Developed Countries. Nestlé Nutrition Workshop Series. Vevey, Switzerland: Nestec/New York, NY: Raven Press;1988:185–199

4. Snow RW, Marsh K. New insights into the epidemiology of malaria relevant for disease control. Br Med Bull.1998;54:293–309

5. Hendrickse RG, Hasan AH, Olumide LO, Akinkunmi A. Malaria in early childhood. An investigation of five hundred seriously ill children in whom a “clinical” diagnosis of malaria was made on admission to the children’s emergency room at University College Hospital, Ibadan. Ann Trop Med Parasitol.1971;65:1–20

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