Nutrition Support for Infants and Children at Risk

59th Nestlé Nutrition Workshop, Pediatric Program, Berlin, April 2006

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Editor(s): Cooke, R.J. (Memphis, TN)
Vandenplas, Y. (Brussels)
Wahn, U. (Berlin)

Status: available   
Publication year: 2007
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This book belongs to
Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series , Vol. 59
XVI + 236 p., 22 fig., 17 tab., hard cover, 2007
Status: available   
ISSN: 1664-2147
e-ISSN: 1664-2155

Malnutrition in children – causes and preventive strategies
Adequate nutrition is especially important during infancy and childhood, where even short periods of malnutrition have long-lasting effects on growth, development and health in adult life. There are several high-risk scenarios for the development of malnutrition, which are the focus of the current publication: Atopic diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, and preterm delivery.
For the pediatric allergist it is important to understand the mechanisms regulating IgE responses to food proteins since they may also be the earliest markers for the atopic march. As breastfeeding seems to have only limited effects regarding the atopic march, other measures to modulate infantile immune responses have to be taken, including the use of hypoallergenic formulae or the addition of probiotics or prebiotics to infant formulae.
The second part of this book highlights the functional properties of nutrition with regard to diseases of the gastrointestinal tract and the ensuing chronic alterations of gastrointestinal function. Topics addressed include the molecular basis of some diseases, main causes of and nutritional measures in chronic enteropathy, including the role of parenteral and enteral nutrition, stressed mucosa and the role of nutrition in cholestatic liver disease.
Nowadays, smaller and more immature infants are surviving - but the smaller the infant, the greater the accrued deficit as nutritional needs change with advancing maturity, and one formulation may not meet all requirements. Furthermore, there are no sensitive, accurate and precise measures of nutritional outcome. The net effect of these uncertainties is that all very-low-birth-weight infants are growth retarded at hospital discharge. Strategies for improving growth in these high-risk infants are at the center of the last part of this publication.

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