Reduced body cell mass following severe head injury in children: implications for rehabilitation.

Pediatr Rehabil

Statewide Paediatric Rehabilitation Service, Royal Children's Hospital, University of Queensland, Herston, Australia.

Published: May 2000

Statement Of Purpose: Increased proteolysis, muscle catabolism and altered body composition have been well documented after severe head injury, but the extent of these effects in children, and whether they extend into rehabilitation, have not been studied. This study determined nutritional status and body composition, with particular reference to the body cell mass (BCM), of head injured children at entry into a rehabilitation programme, and compared body composition analysis with anthropometric nutritional assessment.

Methods: Nineteen head injured children (nine males, 10 females, mean age 9.1 +/- 4.3 years range 1.2-15.1 years) were measured for height, weight and total body potassium (TBK, a measure of body cell mass) on referral to rehabilitation after the acute phase (mean 38.1 days post-injury). Data was compared with expected normative data derived from healthy age and gender matched children. Nutritional status was determined by two separate criteria based on either anthropometric or body composition methods.

Results: The mean percentage of expected TBK for height was 84.4 +/- 15%, significantly below the clinically acceptable level for body cell mass (90% of expected). Using the anthropometric definition, only 1/19 was undernourished, whereas 12/19 had poor nutritional status using body composition (chi 2 = 7.58, p = 0.006).

Conclusions: The data revealed a significant depletion in the metabolically active BCM in the presence of normal anthropometry, suggestive of significant muscle wasting. These findings have important pathophysiological and clinical implications in the rehabilitation of children following major head trauma.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/136384999289504DOI Listing

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