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Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score

OBJECTIVES: Fetal malnutrition (FM) implies soft tissue wasting at birth with significant postnatal consequences and morbidity, and is identified by clinical assessment (CAN score) and anthropometry. No previous studies have been done to study all these parameters and evolve a screening method. The...

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Autores principales: Soundarya, Mahalingam, Basavaprabhu, Achappa, Raghuveera, Kamila, Baliga, BS, Shivanagaraja, BSV
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3448218/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23056862
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author Soundarya, Mahalingam
Basavaprabhu, Achappa
Raghuveera, Kamila
Baliga, BS
Shivanagaraja, BSV
author_facet Soundarya, Mahalingam
Basavaprabhu, Achappa
Raghuveera, Kamila
Baliga, BS
Shivanagaraja, BSV
author_sort Soundarya, Mahalingam
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Fetal malnutrition (FM) implies soft tissue wasting at birth with significant postnatal consequences and morbidity, and is identified by clinical assessment (CAN score) and anthropometry. No previous studies have been done to study all these parameters and evolve a screening method. The aim of this study was identifying the incidence of FM using CAN score and compare the nutritional assessment with anthropometry and evolve a screening tool for rapid assessment of FM. METHODS: Prospective study in Government district maternity hospital. 300 term newborns were assessed by CAN score and anthropometry recorded. The newborns were classified as per weight for age. Ponderal index (PI), Body mass index (BMI) and midarm circumference/head circumference ratio (MAC/HC) calculated and compared to CAN Score for accuracy in identifying FM. FINDINGS: Incidence of FM was 24%. Newborns identified malnourished by PI, BMI, MAC/HC were evaluated by CAN score and significant number of them (31/78 in PI, 60/121 in BMI, 51/81 in MAC/HC) were found well nourished. Similarly those recognized as normal by PI, BMI, MAC/HC were malnourished by CAN score(25/222 in PI, 11/179 in BMI, 42/219 in MAC/HC) with statistical significance(0.0001). BMI had the highest sensitivity and 11 neonates with normal BMI had low CAN score ann 9 of them had normal PI also making a combination of BMI and PI a good indicator of normal nutrition. CONCLUSION: FM is best identified by CAN Score. BMI is the best screening tool for malnutrition and when coupled with PI will identify most normally nourished newborns.
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spelling pubmed-34482182012-10-09 Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score Soundarya, Mahalingam Basavaprabhu, Achappa Raghuveera, Kamila Baliga, BS Shivanagaraja, BSV Iran J Pediatr Original Article OBJECTIVES: Fetal malnutrition (FM) implies soft tissue wasting at birth with significant postnatal consequences and morbidity, and is identified by clinical assessment (CAN score) and anthropometry. No previous studies have been done to study all these parameters and evolve a screening method. The aim of this study was identifying the incidence of FM using CAN score and compare the nutritional assessment with anthropometry and evolve a screening tool for rapid assessment of FM. METHODS: Prospective study in Government district maternity hospital. 300 term newborns were assessed by CAN score and anthropometry recorded. The newborns were classified as per weight for age. Ponderal index (PI), Body mass index (BMI) and midarm circumference/head circumference ratio (MAC/HC) calculated and compared to CAN Score for accuracy in identifying FM. FINDINGS: Incidence of FM was 24%. Newborns identified malnourished by PI, BMI, MAC/HC were evaluated by CAN score and significant number of them (31/78 in PI, 60/121 in BMI, 51/81 in MAC/HC) were found well nourished. Similarly those recognized as normal by PI, BMI, MAC/HC were malnourished by CAN score(25/222 in PI, 11/179 in BMI, 42/219 in MAC/HC) with statistical significance(0.0001). BMI had the highest sensitivity and 11 neonates with normal BMI had low CAN score ann 9 of them had normal PI also making a combination of BMI and PI a good indicator of normal nutrition. CONCLUSION: FM is best identified by CAN Score. BMI is the best screening tool for malnutrition and when coupled with PI will identify most normally nourished newborns. Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2012-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3448218/ /pubmed/23056862 Text en © 2012 Iranian Journal of Pediatrics & Tehran University of Medical Sciences http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial 3.0 License (CC BY-NC 3.0), which allows users to read, copy, distribute and make derivative works for non-commercial purposes from the material, as long as the author of the original work is cited properly.
spellingShingle Original Article
Soundarya, Mahalingam
Basavaprabhu, Achappa
Raghuveera, Kamila
Baliga, BS
Shivanagaraja, BSV
Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score
title Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score
title_full Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score
title_fullStr Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score
title_short Comparative Assessment of Fetal Malnutrition by Anthropometry and CAN Score
title_sort comparative assessment of fetal malnutrition by anthropometry and can score
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3448218/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23056862
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