Malnutrition: Biochemical Consequences

Malnutrition: Biochemical Consequences

Malnutrition: Biochemical Consequences

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Malnutrition Basics - Empty Tank Signals

  • Malnutrition: Nutrient intake imbalance. PEM: Protein-Energy Malnutrition. Undernutrition: Low intake/infections.
  • 📌 Marasmus = Muscle Wasting, Miserable.
  • Key PEM types (Wellcome criteria):
    FeatureMarasmusKwashiorkor
    EdemaNoYes (pitting)
    Body Wt % (age)< 60%60-80% (+edema)
    SC Fat↓↓↓↓ (preserved)
    Muscle WastingSevereSevere (masked)
    AppetiteGoodPoor
    HairSparseFlag sign
    MentalIrritableApathetic

Marasmus vs Kwashiorkor clinical presentation

⭐ Kwashiorkor, meaning “the sickness the older child gets when the next baby is born,” often develops after abrupt weaning to a low-protein, high-carbohydrate diet.

  • Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM): MUAC < 11.5 cm or Wt/Ht Z-score < -3 SD.

Marasmus - The Great Adaptation

  • 📌 MARASMUS: Metabolic Adaptation, Reduced Adipose tissue, Severe wasting, Muscle breakdown, Usually alert, Starvation response.
  • Biochemical Basis: Adaptive response to prolonged starvation, conserving protein.
  • Hormonal Profile:
    • $Insulin \downarrow$ (decreased glucose uptake by peripheral tissues).
    • $Cortisol \uparrow$ (catabolic; permissive for gluconeogenesis, proteolysis).
    • $GH \uparrow$ (lipolytic; peripheral insulin resistance blunts anabolic effects).
    • $Glucagon \uparrow$ (stimulates glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis, ketogenesis).
  • Metabolic Changes (Adaptation):
    • Efficient fat mobilization: Lipolysis $\rightarrow$ FFAs, glycerol (primary fuel source).
    • Muscle protein breakdown $\rightarrow$ amino acids (substrate for gluconeogenesis).
    • Ketogenesis $\rightarrow$ ketone bodies (alternative brain fuel, sparing glucose).
    • Relative preservation of visceral protein synthesis (e.g., albumin) initially.
  • Clinical: Severe wasting ('wizened old man' face), growth retardation, alert/irritable.

⭐ In marasmus, serum albumin levels are often near-normal or only slightly reduced due to adaptive conservation of visceral protein synthesis.

Kwashiorkor - Deceptive Swell

  • Biochemical 'dysadaptation' to protein-energy malnutrition.
  • Key Features:
    • Hypoalbuminemia (Serum albumin $< \textbf{2.8 g/dL}$): ↓Synthesis (essential AA deficiency, oxidative stress) → ↓oncotic pressure → edema.

    • Fatty liver (hepatomegaly): ↓Apolipoprotein B-100 synthesis → impaired VLDL export.

    • Oxidative stress: ↓Glutathione, ↓Vit E, C; ↑free radicals.

    • Electrolyte imbalance: Intracellular ↓K⁺, ↓Mg²⁺ (serum K⁺ normal/↑).

    • Immune dysfunction: ↓Lymphocytes, ↓cytokines.

    • Skin/Hair: 'Flaky paint' dermatosis, flag sign.

    • Hormonal: Insulin normal/↑ (ineffective), ↑cortisol, ↓IGF-1.

  • 📌 Mnemonic: Kwashiorkor Has Low Protein Signs: K=↓K⁺ (intracellular), H=Hypoalbuminemia, L=Fatty liver, P=Edema/Psychomotor changes, S=Skin lesions.

⭐ Reduced synthesis of apolipoprotein B-100 is a key factor in the development of fatty liver in kwashiorkor, leading to impaired export of triglycerides from hepatocytes.

Starvation & Refeeding - Metabolic Tightrope

  • Prolonged Starvation: Further $\downarrow$ BMR; brain adapts to ketone bodies (spares glucose/protein); micronutrient depletion.
  • Refeeding Syndrome:
    • Pathophysiology: Insulin $\uparrow$ (refeeding) $\rightarrow$ catabolism to anabolism shift $\rightarrow$ massive intracellular uptake of $PO_4^{3-}$, $K^+$, $Mg^{2+}$. Thiamine (Vit B1) deficiency exacerbates (cofactor for CHO metabolism).
    • Biochemical Hallmarks:
      • Hypophosphatemia ($PO_4^{3-} \downarrow$): Key, < 0.5 mmol/L (severe).
      • Hypokalemia ($K^+ \downarrow$): < 3.5 mmol/L.
      • Hypomagnesemia ($Mg^{2+} \downarrow$): < 0.7 mmol/L.
    • Consequences: Cardiac (arrhythmias, failure), respiratory (failure), neurological (seizures, Wernicke's), hematological.
    • Prevention: Gradual refeeding; electrolyte monitoring & repletion; prophylactic thiamine (100-300 mg/day).
    • 📌 REFEEDING: Remember Electrolytes, Fluids, Especially Electrolytes, Don't Introduce Nutrients Greedily. Key ions: P, K, Mg.

⭐ Thiamine supplementation is crucial before initiating nutritional support in severely malnourished patients to prevent Wernicke’s encephalopathy, as carbohydrate refeeding increases thiamine demand.

Refeeding Syndrome Mechanism

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Kwashiorkor: Key features are edema, hypoalbuminemia, fatty liver, skin lesions (flaky paint dermatosis), and flag sign hair.
  • Marasmus: Presents with severe muscle wasting, loss of subcutaneous fat (wizened face), no edema, and an alert, irritable state.
  • PEM leads to impaired immune function (especially cell-mediated), increased susceptibility to infections, and critical electrolyte imbalances.
  • Common micronutrient deficiencies include Iron (microcytic anemia), Iodine (goiter, hypothyroidism), and Vitamin A (xerophthalmia, Bitot's spots).
  • Refeeding syndrome is a life-threatening risk: watch for hypophosphatemia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, and potential cardiac/neurological complications during initial re-nutrition.
  • Metabolic adaptation to starvation involves ↓ BMR, initial gluconeogenesis from amino acids, then reliance on fatty acid oxidation and ketone body production to spare protein.
  • Chronic malnutrition results in stunted growth, delayed development, and impaired cognitive function in children, with long-lasting effects on health and productivity.

Practice Questions: Malnutrition: Biochemical Consequences

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 5-year-old has the following anthropometry findings: Weight/age < -3.2 SD, Height/age < -2.5 SD, Weight/height < -1.7 SD. What is the most likely diagnosis?

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Flashcards: Malnutrition: Biochemical Consequences

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In starvation, there is reduction in weight and size of all organs except _____.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

In starvation, there is reduction in weight and size of all organs except _____.

brain

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