E. Benefice et al., Relationship between stunting in infancy and growth and fat distribution during adolescence in Senegalese girls, EUR J CL N, 55(1), 2001, pp. 50-58
Objective: To study the long-term impact of stunting during infancy on matu
ration, growth and fat distribution in adolescence.
Design: A cohort of 406 Senegalese adolescent girls of rural origin underwe
nt clinical and growth assessments every year from 1995 to 1999.
Subjects: Mean coverage rate was 82% at each round. Adolescent girls were 1
1.4+/-0.5 y of age in 1995 and 15.5+/-0.5 y of age in 1999. Their growth st
atus during infancy was known. About 20% of the girls had a height-age (H-a
ge) below -2 Z-scores (chronic malnutrition or stunting) when they were 6-1
8 months of age. As adolescents, the girls were divided into two groups on
the basis of H-age: those stunted and those non-stunted during infancy.
Measurements: Sexual maturation was assessed by stage of breast development
and menarche. Height, body mass, sitting height, bi-iliac and bi-acromial
diameters, and six skinfolds were measured.
Results: Differences in sexual maturation between previously stunted and no
n-stunted girls were not significant. Girls stunted at infancy caught up in
body weight and subcutaneous fat mass during puberty, but they did not cat
ch up on stature, sitting height or skeletal breadths (bi-acromial and bi-i
liac diameters) until the final observation in 1999. Stunted girls did not
have less subcutaneous fat (sum of six skinfolds) or a lower BMI. Regional
variation in subcutaneous fat distribution (Z-score profile) indicated grea
ter accretion at the biceps and subscapular sites in stunted compared to th
e non-stunted girls. Regional fat distribution was also assessed by princip
al component analysis (PCA) performed on the residuals of the six skinfolds
measured during the final round (1999). PCA identified three components. S
tunted and non-stunted girls were similar for the first (trunk-extremity co
ntrast) and second (anterior-posterior contrast) components. However, there
was a difference for the third component: stunted girls tended to accumula
te more subcutaneous fat on the upper part of the body (trunk or arms) than
non-stunted girls.
Conclusion: Stunted Senegalese girls have a potential for catching up in gr
owth during puberty. The greater accumulation of subcutaneous fat on the up
per body in stunted girls may be a consequence of complex hormonal adjustme
nts at the onset of puberty.
Sponsorship: Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD anciennement
ORSTOM) and the Nestle Foundation.