4.2 Article

Evaluating Mid-Upper Arm Circumference Z-Score as a Determinant of Nutrition Status

Journal

NUTRITION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 124-132

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ncp.10018

Keywords

mid-upper arm circumference; pediatrics; nutrition assessment; malnutrition; anthropometry; body composition; z-score

Funding

  1. New England Pediatric Device Consortium

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BackgroundMid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) z-score, has recently been listed as an independent indicator for pediatric malnutrition. This investigation examined the relationship between MUAC z-score and the z-scores for conventional indicators (ie, weight-for-length and body mass index) to expand the available evidence for nutrition classification z-score threshold ranges in U.S. practice settings. MethodsThis was a single-center study of children through 18 years of age seen between October 2015 and September 2016. Height and weight were obtained on intake. MUAC was measured at midpoint of the humerus, between the acromion and olecranon. Age-specific and gender-specific z-score values were calculated using published , , and sigma values derived from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reference data. Nutrition status was determined from biochemical data; prior history; anthropometrics; weight gain velocity; weight loss, if present; and nutrient intake. Results5,004 children (7.5 5.7 years, 53% boys) were evaluated. As expected, MUAC z-scores were significantly correlated with body mass index (r = 0.789, P < .01) and weight-for-length (r = 0.638, P < .01) z-scores. There was a large degree of overlap in z-scores for all indicators between nutrition status groups; however, MUAC z-scores spanned a narrower range of values such that mean MUAC z-scores are lower in children classified as overweight/obese and higher in children who were severely malnourished than the corresponding body mass index or weight-for-length z-scores. ConclusionThese data are the first to suggest that the z-score ranges used to define various stages of malnutrition may not be the same for all indicators.

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