Nutrients (Oct 2021)

Oral Nutritional Supplementation Improves Growth in Children at Malnutrition Risk and with Picky Eating Behaviors

  • Deepti Khanna,
  • Menaka Yalawar,
  • Pinupa Venkata Saibaba,
  • Shirish Bhatnagar,
  • Apurba Ghosh,
  • Pramod Jog,
  • Anuradha Vaman Khadilkar,
  • Bala Kishore,
  • Anil Kumar Paruchuri,
  • Prahalad D. Pote,
  • Ravi D. Mandyam,
  • Sandeep Shinde,
  • Atish Shah,
  • Dieu T. T. Huynh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 3590

Abstract

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The problem of poor nutrition with impaired growth persists in young children worldwide, including in India, where wasting occurs in 20% of urban children (24 to ≤48 months old, at malnutrition risk (weight-for-height percentile 3rd to 15th), and described as a picky eater by their parent. Enrollees were randomized to one of the three groups (N = 107 per group): ONS1 + DC; ONS2 + DC; and DC only. From day 1 to day 90, study findings showed significant increases in weight-for-height percentile for ONS1 + DC and for ONS2 + DC interventions, as compared to DC only (p = 0.0086 for both). There was no significant difference between the two ONS groups. Anthropometric measurements (weight and body mass index) also increased significantly over time for the two ONS groups (versus DC only, p p < 0.05 versus DC only), as well. ONS groups showed a trend toward greater height gain when compared to DC only group, but the differences were not significant within the study interval. For young Indian children with nutritional risk and picky eating behaviors, our findings showed that a 90-day nutritional intervention with either ONS1 or ONS2, along with DC, promoted catch-up growth more effectively than did DC alone.

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