Nutritional Disorders
Nutritional Disorders
Nutritional Disorders
DR. NJAU.N.N.
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OVERWEIGHT AND OBESITY
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INTRODUCTION
• Obesity is defined as excess body fat
accumulation with multiple organ-specific
pathologic consequences.
• Obesity results from an imbalance between
energy intake and energy consumption
• Obesity is defined in terms of the Body Mass
Index (BMI) and according to WHO classification
• one is overweight if the BMI is between 25 to
29 and
• one is obese if the BMI is greater than 30.
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BMI
• The formula is BMI = kg/m2 where kg is a
person's weight in kilograms and m2 is their
height in meters squared.
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Causes of obesity
1. Genetics-obesity is known to run in families,
2. poor diet and eating habits (high carbohydrate diet)
3. sedentary lifestyle,
4. factors during pregnancy that could affect the
weight of the child like gestational diabetes,
smoking and intrauterine under nutrition.
5. Breastfed infants are less likely to be obese later in
life
6. psychological factors like using food as a reward,
comfort and a means of getting attention.
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Types of obesity
• Upper body/android obesity- Mostly around
the trunk (abdominal, visceral, central area).
Individuals are at a risk of cardiovascular
diseases
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Treatment of obesity
• individualized lifestyle modifications and
should include a combination of reduced
calorie diet, increased physical activity
• behavioral therapy
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Behavioral therapy
• These include;
• self-monitoring of eating habits and physical
activity,
• HEALTHY stress management,
• problem solving,
• stimulus control/trigger factors,
• contingency management,
• social support and
• relapse prevention.
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Pharmacotherapy
• Medication reduces weight by 4 to 6 kgs
beyond what would have been achieved had
the patient changed their diet alone.
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• Sibutramine inhibits the uptake of serotonin,
dopamine and norepinephrine thus producing
weight loss by appetite reduction.
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Weight loss surgery/Bariatric surgery
• Bariatric surgery causes significant weight loss,
long-term weight reduction maintenance,
reduces the risk of developing cardio
metabolic disorders, decreases mortality and
improves the quality of life.
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Introduction
• In contrast to obesity, malnutrition and
starvation is a disease experienced mostly in
underdeveloped and developing countries
and they are diseases in which an individual is
unable or does not receive adequate
nutrients for bodily functions.
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• The protein lost is that from the visceral
compartment that results in hypoalbuminemia
leading to edema that usually masks the true
weight lost by the child.
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Clinical presentation
• The children usually present with skin hyper
and hypopigmentation and areas of
desquamation giving the skin a flaky
appearance.
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• There’s also reversible mucosal atrophy of the
small bowel and villi and microvilli loss and
loss of the small intestine enzymes e.g.
dissacharidase hence these children do NOT
respond well to milk based diets
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Cachexia
• This is a secondary PEM seen in cancer
patients that usually presents with severe
wasting that presages death and is due to an
elevated basal metabolic rate and the
production of tumor necrosis factor that
stimulates the usage of lipids from lipid stores.
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Management
• Nutritional supplement: foods rich in protein
(and carbohydrates in the case of marasmus
and cachexia)
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