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Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major

OBJECTIVE: Children with thalassemia major (TM) are prone to growth failure and micronutrient deficiency. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate nutritional status, anthropometrics, and bone mineralization defects in patients with regular blood transfusion. METHODS: Data obtained were analyzed by evalua...

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Autores principales: BULGURCU, Serap Cevher, CANBOLAT AYHAN, Aylin, EMEKSIZ, Hamdi Cihan, OVALI, Fahri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Galenos Publishing 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8694160/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34939399
http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/MMJ.galenos.2021.66915
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author BULGURCU, Serap Cevher
CANBOLAT AYHAN, Aylin
EMEKSIZ, Hamdi Cihan
OVALI, Fahri
author_facet BULGURCU, Serap Cevher
CANBOLAT AYHAN, Aylin
EMEKSIZ, Hamdi Cihan
OVALI, Fahri
author_sort BULGURCU, Serap Cevher
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Children with thalassemia major (TM) are prone to growth failure and micronutrient deficiency. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate nutritional status, anthropometrics, and bone mineralization defects in patients with regular blood transfusion. METHODS: Data obtained were analyzed by evaluating laboratory tests, anthropometric measures, and bone mineral density. RESULTS: This study included 29 patients (62% male and 38% female) with a mean age of 12.26±4.74 years, mean pre-transfusion hemoglobin of 8.64±1.01 g/dL, and mean serum ferritin of 1158.6±556.8 ng/mL. Vitamin D (72.4%), selenium (72.4%), and folate (37.9%) deficiencies were most frequent. Hypocalcemia was observed in 17.2%, hypomagnesemia in 3.5%, and decreased ceruloplasmin in 10.3% of patients. Folate was higher between 2 and 6 years old (p=0.028). Ceruloplasmin was higher between 6 and 10 years old (p=0.018). Selenium was significantly higher in patients with a ferritin of ≥1,500 (p=0.008). No significant ferritin-related differences were found in other micronutrients (p>0.05). Body mass index (BMI) were <5 percentile (p) in 31% of patient, whereas none was >95 p. Height in 24.5% and weight in 20.7% of patients were <3 p, whereas none with >97 p. BMI of patients aged 10-18 years was significantly higher (p=0.001). Anthropometric percentiles did not significantly differ in the mean serum ferritin and micronutrient levels. Hypoparathyroidism was observed in 13.8% and hypothyroidism in 3.5% of patients. Low bone density was detected in 14.8% (2 osteopenic and 2 osteoporotic) of patients. Bone mineral density did not significantly differ in the ferritin and micronutrient levels. CONCLUSIONS: Nutritional support and deficiency prevention are important to minimize the burden of complications and increase the life expectancy and quality in patients with TM.
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spelling pubmed-86941602022-01-03 Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major BULGURCU, Serap Cevher CANBOLAT AYHAN, Aylin EMEKSIZ, Hamdi Cihan OVALI, Fahri Medeni Med J Original Article OBJECTIVE: Children with thalassemia major (TM) are prone to growth failure and micronutrient deficiency. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate nutritional status, anthropometrics, and bone mineralization defects in patients with regular blood transfusion. METHODS: Data obtained were analyzed by evaluating laboratory tests, anthropometric measures, and bone mineral density. RESULTS: This study included 29 patients (62% male and 38% female) with a mean age of 12.26±4.74 years, mean pre-transfusion hemoglobin of 8.64±1.01 g/dL, and mean serum ferritin of 1158.6±556.8 ng/mL. Vitamin D (72.4%), selenium (72.4%), and folate (37.9%) deficiencies were most frequent. Hypocalcemia was observed in 17.2%, hypomagnesemia in 3.5%, and decreased ceruloplasmin in 10.3% of patients. Folate was higher between 2 and 6 years old (p=0.028). Ceruloplasmin was higher between 6 and 10 years old (p=0.018). Selenium was significantly higher in patients with a ferritin of ≥1,500 (p=0.008). No significant ferritin-related differences were found in other micronutrients (p>0.05). Body mass index (BMI) were <5 percentile (p) in 31% of patient, whereas none was >95 p. Height in 24.5% and weight in 20.7% of patients were <3 p, whereas none with >97 p. BMI of patients aged 10-18 years was significantly higher (p=0.001). Anthropometric percentiles did not significantly differ in the mean serum ferritin and micronutrient levels. Hypoparathyroidism was observed in 13.8% and hypothyroidism in 3.5% of patients. Low bone density was detected in 14.8% (2 osteopenic and 2 osteoporotic) of patients. Bone mineral density did not significantly differ in the ferritin and micronutrient levels. CONCLUSIONS: Nutritional support and deficiency prevention are important to minimize the burden of complications and increase the life expectancy and quality in patients with TM. Galenos Publishing 2021-12 2021-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8694160/ /pubmed/34939399 http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/MMJ.galenos.2021.66915 Text en © Copyright Istanbul Medeniyet University Faculty of Medicine. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This journal is published by Galenos Publishing House. Licenced by Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
spellingShingle Original Article
BULGURCU, Serap Cevher
CANBOLAT AYHAN, Aylin
EMEKSIZ, Hamdi Cihan
OVALI, Fahri
Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major
title Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major
title_full Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major
title_fullStr Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major
title_short Assessment of the Nutritional Status, Bone Mineralization, and Anthropometrics of Children with Thalassemia Major
title_sort assessment of the nutritional status, bone mineralization, and anthropometrics of children with thalassemia major
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8694160/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34939399
http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/MMJ.galenos.2021.66915
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