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Journal ArticleDOI

Malnutrition, cell-mediated immune deficiency and acute upper respiratory infections in rural Bangladeshi children.

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TLDR
The study demonstrated that wasting and depressed cell‐mediated immunity (CMI), but not stunting, were associated with the incidence of URI among rural Bangladeshi children.
Abstract
A community-based longitudinal study conducted in rural Bangladesh investigated the association between nutritional status, cell-mediated immune status and acute upper respiratory infections (URI). A total of 696 children aged 0-59 months was followed prospectively for 1 y yielding 183,865 child-days' observation. Trained field workers visited each child every 4th d and collected morbidity data on symptoms suggesting URI (cough, fever, nasal discharge) for the preceding 3 d by recall. On the day of visit they examined each child reporting cough and/or fever to record the temperature, presence of nasal discharge, rate of respiration and presence of chest indrawing. Anthropometry for all children was conducted monthly. Cell-mediated immune competence was assessed by a multiple antigen skin test at baseline and thereafter every 3 months. The incidence of URI was 5.3 episodes per child-year observed. Approximately three-quarters of the study children were below -2 Z-score weight for age and height for age, and a quarter below -2 Z-score weight for height. During different test periods 9-21% of the study children did not respond to any of the test antigens. In a regression model children < -2 Z-score for weight for height had 16% [odds ratio (OR) 1.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.03-1.31, p = 0.01] higher risk of developing URI. Anergic children had 20% higher risk (OR 1.20, CI 1.05-1.38, p = 0.009) of URI than immunocompetent children. The study demonstrated that wasting and depressed cell-mediated immunity (CMI), but not stunting, were associated with the incidence of URI among rural Bangladeshi children.

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Citations
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Markers to measure immunomodulation in human nutrition intervention studies

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Severe malnutrition with and without HIV-1 infection in hospitalised children in Kampala, Uganda: differences in clinical features, haematological findings and CD4+ cell counts.

TL;DR: The novel observation of this study is that the CD4+ percentages in both HIV-positive and HIV-negative children without oedema were lower that those in children with Oedema, which appears to imply that the development of oedematous malnutrition requires a certain degree of immunocompetence.
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Immunological Parameters: What Do They Mean?

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, an extension of generalized linear models to the analysis of longitudinal data is proposed, which gives consistent estimates of the regression parameters and of their variance under mild assumptions about the time dependence.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Scott L. Zeger, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1986 - 
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal Article

The presentation and use of height and weight data for comparing the nutritional status of groups of children under the age of 10 years

TL;DR: This paper presents recommendations for the analysis and presentation of height and weight data from surveillance or surveys involving nutrition and anthropometry in young children up to the age of 10 years, with the basic indices recommended are height for age and weight for height.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Epidemiology of Acute Respiratory Tract Infection in Young Children: Comparison of Findings from Several Developing Countries

TL;DR: Investigators from 10 countries studied the epidemiology of acute respiratory tract infection among children 0-59 months old to provide interesting and useful data on the epidemiologic dynamics of ARI.
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