A Longitudinal Study of Dental Caries in the Primary Teeth of Children who Suffered from Infant MalnutritionJ O Alvarez, J. Caceda, T.W. Woolley et al.|Journal of Dental Research|1993 A prospective, four-year longitudinal study of 209 Peruvian children was conducted to evaluate the effect of a single malnutrition episode occurring at infancy (i.e., < 1 year of age) on dental caries in the primary teeth. Children were recruited into the study at age 6-11 months after they had suffered from a malnutrition episode and were thus classified by anthropometry as either: (1) Normal; (2) Wasted (low weight for height); (3) Stunted (low height for age); or (4) Stunted and Wasted (S and W). Eruption of the primary teeth was significantly delayed in all malnourished children; however, the effect of stunting--that is, retarded linear growth--was more pronounced and lasted longer than that of wasting or acute malnutrition (i.e., 2.5 vs. 1.5 years, respectively). By age 4 years, children from group 4 (S and W) showed a significantly higher caries experience in the primary teeth than did those in any of the other three groups. In summary, this longitudinal study has confirmed previous studies in animals and indirect epidemiological evidence which had suggested a cause-effect relationship between early malnutrition and increased dental caries.
Nutritional status, tooth eruption, and dental caries: a reviewJ O Alvarez, Juan Manuel Andrade Navia|American Journal of Clinical Nutrition|1989 The Effect of Nutritional Status on the Age Distribution of Dental Caries in the Primary TeethJ O Alvarez, J.C. Eguren, J. Caceda et al.|Journal of Dental Research|1990 A cross-sectional study of dental caries in the primary teeth as a function of nutritional status was conducted on 1481 children one to 13 years old in Lima, Perú. Forty-one percent of the children were found to be chronically malnourished (stunted), 3% were acutely malnourished (wasted), and 5% were both stunted and wasted. A plot of decayed, extracted, and filled teeth (deft) vs. age resulted in a bell-shaped curve that was shifted to the right by 2.5 years for malnourished groups, compared with normal children (p less than 0.01). The shift to the right of the age distribution of caries was associated with a delay in both the eruption and exfoliation of the primary teeth in malnourished children. Peak caries activity was significantly higher in wasted and in stunted and wasted children, when compared with normal controls. It is concluded that malnutrition delayed tooth development, affected the age distribution of dental caries, and resulted in increased caries experience in the primary teeth.
Loss of maternally acquired measles antibodies in well-nourished infants and response to measles vaccination, Peru.Abraham Vaisberg, J O Alvarez, Herminio Hernández et al.|American Journal of Public Health|1990 Clinical, anthropometric, and serological evaluations were conducted at birth and at 3, 6, 9, and 10 months (post measles vaccination) in 34 well-nourished Peruvian infants. Seroconversion rate after measles vaccination was 94 percent. The rate of antibody loss was a direct function of birth titer; at age 9 months, all children had identical mean titers regardless of their titer at birth. Differences in maternally acquired measles antibodies at birth were important only during the first six months of life.
[Risk factors of fetal malnutrition in a group of Guatemalan mothers and neonates].In order to determine the relationship between nutritional, sociodemographic, and obstetrical variables and fetal malnutrition, a study was done on a group of mothers of nonpremature neonates born in a hospital in the central mountainous region of Guatemala. Of the 306 neonates, 105 (34%) presented fetal malnutrition (intrauterine growth retardation, IUGR), which in 77% of the cases was chronic (fetal atrophy, or IUGR type I) and in 23% of the cases was acute (fetal emaciation, or IUGR type II). The maternal factors related to fetal atrophy were puerperal nutritional indicators (weight, height, skinfold thickness, and arm circumference) and sociodemographic indicators (schooling, literacy, and socioeconomic level). Fetal emaciation was found to be related to obstetrical characteristics such as number of previous deliveries and birth interval. The results suggest that poverty, malnutrition, and precarious living conditions over prolonged periods of time are related to chronic fetal malnutrition (fetal atrophy), which is very frequent in this population.