Growth Charts 101 - Charting the Course
- Visual tools for tracking child's growth; detect deviations early.
- Chart Types:
- WHO (0-5 yrs): Standards; optimal conditions (breastfed).
⭐ WHO growth charts (0-5 years) are considered growth standards as they depict growth under optimal conditions, not just references.
- IAP (Indian, 5-18 yrs): References for Indian children.
- Special charts (Preterm, Down Syndrome, Turner).
- WHO (0-5 yrs): Standards; optimal conditions (breastfed).
- Parameters: Weight, Height/Length, Weight-for-Height, BMI, Head Circumference (HC up to 3-5 yrs).
- Interpretation:
- Serial plots crucial; trend over single value.
- Normal: ±2 SD (Z-score) or 3rd-97th centile.
- Crossing centiles / flat curve: Needs evaluation.

Measuring Up - The Growth Metrics
- Weight:
- Calibrated electronic/beam balance. Infants: Salter/pan scale.
- Accuracy: 10g (infants), 100g (older).
- Length/Height:
- Recumbent length: < 2 yrs / < 85 cm (Infantometer).
- Standing height: > 2 yrs (Stadiometer). Frankfort plane horizontal.
- Accuracy: 0.1 cm.
⭐ Recumbent length is measured using an infantometer until 2 years of age; standing height is measured using a stadiometer thereafter.
- Head Circumference (HC):
- Up to 3-5 yrs. Non-stretch tape: occiput to supraorbital ridges.
- Accuracy: 0.1 cm.
- Mid-Upper Arm Circumference (MUAC):
- Nutritional status (PEM). Midpoint acromion-olecranon. Shakir tape.
- Chest Circumference (CC):
- Nipple level. HC > CC (birth), HC = CC (1 yr), CC > HC (>1 yr).

Decoding the Dots - Interpreting Curves
- Single Point Interpretation:
- Percentiles: Child's rank vs. peers (e.g., 50th = average). Key lines: 3rd, 15th, 50th, 85th, 97th.
- Z-scores (SD scores): Precise, vital for extremes.
- Normal: -2 SD to +2 SD.
- Malnutrition (underweight/stunting/wasting): < -2 SD (moderate), < -3 SD (severe).
- Overweight (Wt-for-Ht/BMI): > +1 SD.
- Obesity (Wt-for-Ht/BMI): > +2 SD.
- Growth Velocity (Trend Analysis):
- Serial measurements are paramount.
- Crossing ≥2 major percentile lines (up/down) is significant.
- Flat curve: Growth faltering (needs evaluation).
- Rapid ↑: Catch-up growth or excessive gain.
⭐ The trend of growth (velocity) observed through serial measurements is more informative than a single isolated measurement.

Red Flags & Ranges - Spotting Issues
- Malnutrition Definitions (WHO SD Cutoffs):
Condition Indicator Moderate Severe Type Stunting HFA < -2SD < -3SD Chronic Wasting WFH < -2SD < -3SD Acute Underweight WFA < -2SD < -3SD Acute/Chronic ⭐ Weight-for-height is the most sensitive indicator of acute malnutrition (wasting).
- Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM): WFH < -3SD OR MUAC < 11.5 cm (6-59 mo) OR edema.
- Moderate Acute Malnutrition (MAM): WFH -2SD to -3SD OR MUAC 11.5-12.5 cm (6-59 mo).
- Failure To Thrive (FTT): Weight < 5th percentile; crosses 2 major percentiles ↓; poor gain.
- Overweight/Obesity (WHO BMI-for-age):
- Overweight: > +1SD to +2SD.
- Obesity: > +2SD. Severe: > +3SD.
- Altered Head Size: Microcephaly (HC < -2SD); Macrocephaly (HC > +2SD).
- Short Stature: Height-for-Age < -2SD.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Use WHO charts for children < 5 years, IAP charts for > 5 years.
- Mid-parental height (MPH) predicts target adult height.
- Weight-for-height best indicates acute malnutrition (wasting).
- Height-for-age indicates chronic malnutrition (stunting).
- Head circumference is crucial for brain growth, especially in the first 2 years.
- ↓ Growth velocity is an early sign of growth failure.
- Bone age (X-ray wrist) assesses skeletal maturity and growth potential.
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