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Title: Does malnutrition predispose to diarrhoea during childhood? Evidence from a longitudinal study in Matlab, Bangladesh. Author: Chowdhury MK, Gupta VM, Bairagi R, Bhattacharya BN. Journal: Eur J Clin Nutr; 1990 Jul; 44(7):515-25. PubMed ID: 2401282. Abstract: It is posited that diarrhoeal illness during one period has influence on diarrhoeal illness in a subsequent period. This relationship may potentially mask the association between malnutrition and subsequent diarrhoea. To test this, we analysed data on cross-sectional anthropometry in combination with data on diarrhoeal morbidity collected longitudinally in a community-based study of 1262 children (aged 6-60 months) during March-December, 1976, in Matlab, Bangladesh. The results confirmed the posited relationship between diarrhoeal morbidities in two consecutive periods and showed that the risks of diarrhoeal attack and longer diarrhoeal illness increased more than threefold during the 2 months following diarrhoeal illness during the preceding 2 months (previous diarrhoea). Children with no previous diarrhoea indicated a positive association between malnutrition and subsequent diarrhoea, but the pattern found among children with previous diarrhoea was not understandable. Logistic regression analyses performed separately for younger and older children showed that controlling for effects of previous diarrhoea, maternal illiteracy and household poverty, severe malnutrition as assessed by weight-for-age was found to be strongly associated with the risk of longer diarrhoeal illness in a 2-month interval in the age group 24-60 months; in the same age group the association with the risk of diarrhoeal attack was significant at the 10 per cent level. No such association for malnutrition, however, was found in the age group 6-23 months.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]