Cargando…

A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy

BACKGROUND: Cerebral palsy is the most common cause of physical disability in childhood, occurring in one in 500 children. It is caused by a static brain lesion in the neonatal period leading to a range of activity limitations. Oral motor and swallowing dysfunction, poor nutritional status and poor...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bell, Kristie L, Boyd, Roslyn N, Tweedy, Sean M, Weir, Kelly A, Stevenson, Richard D, Davies, Peter SW
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2867996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20370929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-179
_version_ 1782181022689918976
author Bell, Kristie L
Boyd, Roslyn N
Tweedy, Sean M
Weir, Kelly A
Stevenson, Richard D
Davies, Peter SW
author_facet Bell, Kristie L
Boyd, Roslyn N
Tweedy, Sean M
Weir, Kelly A
Stevenson, Richard D
Davies, Peter SW
author_sort Bell, Kristie L
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cerebral palsy is the most common cause of physical disability in childhood, occurring in one in 500 children. It is caused by a static brain lesion in the neonatal period leading to a range of activity limitations. Oral motor and swallowing dysfunction, poor nutritional status and poor growth are reported frequently in young children with cerebral palsy and may impact detrimentally on physical and cognitive development, health care utilisation, participation and quality of life in later childhood. The impact of modifiable factors (dietary intake and physical activity) on growth, nutritional status, and body composition (taking into account motor severity) in this population is poorly understood. This study aims to investigate the relationship between a range of factors - linear growth, body composition, oral motor and feeding dysfunction, dietary intake, and time spent sedentary (adjusting for motor severity) - and health outcomes, health care utilisation, participation and quality of life in young children with cerebral palsy (from corrected age of 18 months to 5 years). DESIGN/METHODS: This prospective, longitudinal, population-based study aims to recruit a total of 240 young children with cerebral palsy born in Queensland, Australia between 1(st )September 2006 and 31(st )December 2009 (80 from each birth year). Data collection will occur at three time points for each child: 17 - 25 months corrected age, 36 ± 1 months and 60 ± 1 months. Outcomes to be assessed include linear growth, body weight, body composition, dietary intake, oral motor function and feeding ability, time spent sedentary, participation, medical resource use and quality of life. DISCUSSION: This protocol describes a study that will provide the first longitudinal description of the relationship between functional attainment and modifiable lifestyle factors (dietary intake and habitual time spent sedentary) and their impact on the growth, body composition and nutritional status of young children with cerebral palsy across all levels of functional ability.
format Text
id pubmed-2867996
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28679962010-05-12 A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy Bell, Kristie L Boyd, Roslyn N Tweedy, Sean M Weir, Kelly A Stevenson, Richard D Davies, Peter SW BMC Public Health Study protocol BACKGROUND: Cerebral palsy is the most common cause of physical disability in childhood, occurring in one in 500 children. It is caused by a static brain lesion in the neonatal period leading to a range of activity limitations. Oral motor and swallowing dysfunction, poor nutritional status and poor growth are reported frequently in young children with cerebral palsy and may impact detrimentally on physical and cognitive development, health care utilisation, participation and quality of life in later childhood. The impact of modifiable factors (dietary intake and physical activity) on growth, nutritional status, and body composition (taking into account motor severity) in this population is poorly understood. This study aims to investigate the relationship between a range of factors - linear growth, body composition, oral motor and feeding dysfunction, dietary intake, and time spent sedentary (adjusting for motor severity) - and health outcomes, health care utilisation, participation and quality of life in young children with cerebral palsy (from corrected age of 18 months to 5 years). DESIGN/METHODS: This prospective, longitudinal, population-based study aims to recruit a total of 240 young children with cerebral palsy born in Queensland, Australia between 1(st )September 2006 and 31(st )December 2009 (80 from each birth year). Data collection will occur at three time points for each child: 17 - 25 months corrected age, 36 ± 1 months and 60 ± 1 months. Outcomes to be assessed include linear growth, body weight, body composition, dietary intake, oral motor function and feeding ability, time spent sedentary, participation, medical resource use and quality of life. DISCUSSION: This protocol describes a study that will provide the first longitudinal description of the relationship between functional attainment and modifiable lifestyle factors (dietary intake and habitual time spent sedentary) and their impact on the growth, body composition and nutritional status of young children with cerebral palsy across all levels of functional ability. BioMed Central 2010-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2867996/ /pubmed/20370929 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-179 Text en Copyright ©2010 Bell et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study protocol
Bell, Kristie L
Boyd, Roslyn N
Tweedy, Sean M
Weir, Kelly A
Stevenson, Richard D
Davies, Peter SW
A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
title A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
title_full A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
title_fullStr A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
title_full_unstemmed A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
title_short A prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
title_sort prospective, longitudinal study of growth, nutrition and sedentary behaviour in young children with cerebral palsy
topic Study protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2867996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20370929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-179
work_keys_str_mv AT bellkristiel aprospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT boydroslynn aprospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT tweedyseanm aprospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT weirkellya aprospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT stevensonrichardd aprospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT daviespetersw aprospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT bellkristiel prospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT boydroslynn prospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT tweedyseanm prospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT weirkellya prospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT stevensonrichardd prospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy
AT daviespetersw prospectivelongitudinalstudyofgrowthnutritionandsedentarybehaviourinyoungchildrenwithcerebralpalsy