 | | Protein-Energy Requirements of Developing Countries: Evaluation of New Data (UNU, 1981, 268 p.) |
 |  | | Protein-energy requirements-children |
 |  | | Capacity of habitual Guatemalan diets to satisfy protein requirements of pre-school children with adequate dietary energy intakes |
 |
 | | (introduction...) |
 | | Objective |
 | | Experimental details |
 | | Summary of main results |
 | | Comments |
 | | Conclusions |
|
Comments
- The results indicate that the diet used in this study satisfied the
protein needs of healthy, well nourished, pre-school children. In contrast with
the most common dietary practices among people of low socio-economic conditions
in developing countries, the preparation and administration of the foods
differed in three important ways: (a) the increment in energy density achieved
by the addition of oil and sugar to some foods; (b) the availability of staple
foods in sufficient amounts to satisfy the children's appetites; and (c) the
preparation and administration of the foods in the same way as for adults (e.g.,
feeding whole beans to small children instead of only a watery bean soup). These
three conditions can be met by an increment in local food resources, including
fats, combined with an educational programme for the use of such resources.
- It is not necessary to use large amounts of proteins from animal sources or
of commercially processed foods, as these tend to be more expensive and less
regularly available and may imply greater changes in food preparation and eating
habits than the mere addition of fats and carbohydrates to staples. The diet
used in this investigation included small amounts of animal proteins on some
days. It remains to be shown if these small additions of high-quality proteins
are essential to other diets of exclusively vegetable origin. Our previous
investigations with diets based on corn and black beans indicated that such
additions or other protein fortification measures are not necessary, provided
that the vegetable foods are eaten in such quantities and proportions that a
good complementary vegetable protein mixture is absorbed by the children. In any
event, the present study demonstrated that it is not necessary for such
high-quality protein "complements" to be ingested with every meal or
every day.
- The use of mixed diets with varied menus and free choice of
intake departed from the traditional patterns of metabolic studies. However, it
resembled everyday life since children do not eat the same foods or the same
amounts day after day, and all the nutrients in their diet are not always
digested and absorbed simultaneously or in similar time sequences. This
experimental design also accounted for some of the possible interactions of
various nutrients and other food components, such as the effects that the
presence of different amounts and types of dietary fibres may have on nitrogen
and fat absorption on different days.
- Complete collections of daily
excrete might yield more accurate metabolic-balance results, but this is
feasible only with older children and adults. The 4-day interval surrogate used
in this study was adequate, as shown by the replication of the 28-day periods.
The results did not vary unless the children became sick for several days with
fever and marked anorexia; illness and mild symptoms did not produce any changes
in metabolic balances.
- Growth rates were also similar in the two
consecutive periods. Therefore, a 28-day period might be adequate to assess the
effects on body weight and metabolic balance of local diets eaten in the usual
patterns if the children do not become ill. Otherwise, 28-day replications are
necessary. The evaluation of other anthropometric changes, such as length, lean
arm diameter, and subcutaneous skin-fold thickness, requires a longer period (42
to 56 days).
- There is no satisfactory explanation for the apparent high
nitrogen retentions. This is known to occur in children and adults with protein
intakes well beyond their requirements. The important observation derived from
this study was that nitrogen balance remained positive and sufficed to cover the
estimated needs for growth and insensible nitrogen losses. This is supported by
the stability of the CHI and the small, but consistent, increment in lean arm
diameters.
- The energy expenditure and balance data confirm our previous
observations that mean net energy intakes (i.e., dietary intakes measured by
bomb calorimetry and corrected for faecal losses) of 82 to 85 kcal/kg/day are
adequate for active, well nourished children two to four years old. The energy
not available from the protein absorbed, calculated from urinary nitrogen
excretion, was about 1 kcal/kg/day. Consequently, the net energy intake is
similar to that calculated from food composition and the Atwater energy factors
for proteins, fats, and carbohydrates. Since the coefficient of variability of
the mean net intake was 5 to 6 per cent, it seems safe to recommend energy
intakes of 92 to 95 kcal/kg/day (mean + 12 per cent) for well nourished children
of this age group.
- The question remains open as to whether diets of the
types used in this investigation will allow children with mild-to-moderate
nutritional deficiencies to catch up. This is highly relevant, since such
children make up the majority of the pre-school age population of low
socio-economic groups in the developing world. The catch-up in length and high
rates of weight gain observed in this investigation suggest that this might be
possible. The answer can be explored through a similar study on apparently
healthy children with small weight deficits (5 to 15 per cent below that
expected for their heights) who do not have clinical signs of malnutrition
except for their leanness. A longer period of time (e.g., 84 instead of 56 days)
may be necessary to assess the rates of catch-up growth and to account for the
impact of disease that might occur.