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Micronutrients in childhood and the influence of subclinical inflammation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2007

David I. Thurnham*
Affiliation:
Northern Ireland Centre for Food and Health, School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Ulster, Coleraine BT52 1SA, County Londonderry, UK
Anne S.W. Mburu
Affiliation:
Kenya Medical Research Institute, Centre for Public Health Research, Nairobi, Kenya
David L. Mwaniki
Affiliation:
Kenya Medical Research Institute, Centre for Public Health Research, Nairobi, Kenya
Arjan De Wagt
Affiliation:
UNICEF East Asia and Pacific Regional Office, Bangkok, Thailand
*
*Corresponding author: Professor D. I. Thurnham, present address 47 Knocknougher Road, Macosquin, ColeraineBT51 4LA, UK, fax +44 2870 324965, email di.thurnham@ulster.ac.uk
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Abstract

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In the present paper biomarkers of micronutrient status in childhood and some of the factors influencing them, mainly dietary intake, requirements and inflammation will be examined. On a body-weight basis the micronutrient requirements of children are mostly higher than those of an adult, but most biomarkers of status are not age-related. A major factor that is often overlooked in assessing status is the influence of subclinical inflammation on micronutrient biomarkers. In younger children particularly the immune system is still developing and there is a higher frequency of sickness than in adults. The inflammatory response rapidly influences the concentration in the blood of several important micronutrients such as vitamin A, Fe and Zn, even in the first 24 h, whereas dietary deficiencies can be envisaged as having a more gradual effect on biomarkers of nutritional status. The rapid response to infection may be for protective reasons, i.e. conservation of reserves, or by placing demands on those reserves to mount an effective immune response. However, because there is a high prevalence of disease in many developing countries, an apparently-healthy child may well be at the incubation stage or convalescing when blood is taken for nutritional assessment and the concentration of certain micronutrient biomarkers will not give a true indication of status. Most biomarkers influenced by inflammation are known, but often they are used because they are convenient or cheap and the influence of subclinical inflammation is either ignored or overlooked. The objective of the present paper is to discuss: (1) some of the important micronutrient deficiencies in childhood influenced by inflammation; (2) ways of correcting the interference from inflammation.

Type
Symposium on ‘Micronutrients through the life cycle’
Copyright
Copyright © The Nutrition Society 2005

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