AI Article Synopsis

  • Infantile beriberi, caused by thiamine deficiency, is resurging in South and Southeast Asia, linked to maternal deficiencies and inadequate breast milk.
  • High incidence of beriberi is influenced by poor dietary practices and cultural restrictions, which contribute to low thiamine levels in infants.
  • Public health efforts to address thiamine deficiency face challenges due to misdiagnosis, unclear biomarkers, and the need for standardized definitions to improve diagnosis and treatment in low-resource settings.

Article Abstract

Infantile beriberi, a potentially fatal disorder caused by thiamine deficiency, is often viewed as a disease confined to history in regions of the world with predominant white rice consumption. Recent case reports have, however, highlighted the persistence of thiamine deficiency as a cause of infant mortality in South and Southeast Asia. Low infant thiamine status and incidence of beriberi is attributable to maternal thiamine deficiency and insufficient breast milk thiamine. Poor dietary diversity, food preparation and cooking practices and traditional post-partum food restrictions likely play a role in these high-risk regions. Given the contribution of thiamine deficiency to infant mortality and emerging evidence of long-lasting neurodevelopmental deficits of severe and even subclinical deficiency in early life, public health strategies to prevent thiamine deficiency are urgently needed. However, efforts are hampered by uncertainties surrounding the identification and assessment of thiamine deficiency, due to the broad non-specific clinical manifestations, commonly referred to as thiamine deficiency disorders (TDD), that overlap with other conditions resulting in frequent misdiagnosis and missed treatment opportunities, and secondly the lack of readily available and agreed upon biomarker analysis and cut-off thresholds. This review will discuss the key challenges and limitations in the current understanding of TDD and explore how ongoing initiatives plan to fill persistent knowledge gaps, namely in the development of a standardised case definition to help more accurately diagnose and treat TDD in low-resource settings. Given more attention and ensuring greater recognition of TDD will support the design and implementation of treatment and prevention programmes, and ensure beriberi can truly be considered 'the forgotten disease of Asia'.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7986856PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nbu.12481DOI Listing

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