Physical Growth of Low-Birth-Weight Babies in First Six Months of Life: A Longitudinal Study in A Rural Block of Assam

Authors

  • Madhur Borah NEIGRIHMS, Shillong
  • Rupali Baruah Gauhati Medical College, Guwahati

Keywords:

LBW, physical growth, Catch up growth, under nutrition, longitudinal study

Abstract

Introduction: A longitudinal study was carried out in a rural block of Assam to assess the physical growth pattern of Low Birth Weight babies during their first six months of life and to compare the growth pattern with Normal Birth Weight counterparts.

Methods: Total 30 LBW babies (0 -2 months) and equal numbers of NBW babies were randomly selected under five sub centres. They were followed up in monthly intervals till 6 months of age.

Results: During the study period LBW infants had lower mean weight, length, head circumference compared to NBW infants. But LBW infants had higher rate of weight gain, increase in length and head circumference than the NBW infants. By 6 months of age 20% LBW babies caught up in weight and 30% in head circumference with NBW infants. 77% LBW infants remained underweight at 6 months of age (RR = 3.74).

Conclusion: LBW babies had higher rate of weight gain during the first 6 months of age but still remained significantly lighter than the NBW infants.

References

Gerdes M, Bernbaum J. Follow-up care of the low birth weight infant. Indian J Pediatr. 1998; Nov-Dec; 65(6): 829-39.

Bhargava S K, Kumari S, Choudhury P Bhutani R, Sachdev H P S. A longitudinal study of physical growth of small for date infants from birth to six years. Nutr Res. 1985b; 5: 707-713

Grantham-McGregor SM et al. Developmental poten-tial in the first 5 years for children in developing coun-tries. Lancet. 2007; 369 (9555): 60-70

Sachdev H P S. Low Birth Weight in South Asia. Int. J Diab. Dev. Countries. 2001: vol. 21; p 13-31

International Institute of Population Science. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3) 2005-06: India: Vol-ume 1. Mumbai; International Institute of population Science and Macro International; 2007. P 225

Park K. Park’s text book of Preventive and social medicine. 22nd edition. Jabalpur: M/S Banarasidas Bhanot Publishers; 2013. P 495

Bavdekar A R, Vaidya U V, Bhave S, Pandit A N .Catch up growth and its determinants in low birth weight babies: a study using z scores. Indian Pediat-rics. 1994; December 1994, Vol. 31, Number 12;1483-1490

Ashworth A, Morris SS, Lira P. Postnatal Growth Patterns of Full-Term Low Birth Weight Infants in Northeast Brazil Are Related to Socioeconomic Sta-tus. The Journal of Nutrition. 127: p:1950–1956, 1997

Paul B, Saha I. Physical growth pattern and morbidi-ty of LBW babies in a slum of Kolkata. Lambert Aca-demic Publishing; 2010

Baburaj S, Abraham B, Vasant P, Raj S, Mohandas MK. Growth and development of high risk graduates till one year from a rural neonatal intensive care unit in south India. International Journal of Biomedical Research. 04 (12): p 695-700: 2013.

Karim E, Mascie-Taylor CG. Longitudinal growth of Bangladeshi infants during the first year of life. Ann Hum Biol. 2001 Jan-Feb; 28 (1): p 51-67

Westerberg AC et al. First year growth among very low birth weight infants. Acta Paediatr. 2010 Apr; 99(4):55662. doi: 10.1111/j.16512227.2009.01667. x. Epub 2010 Jan 20.

Modi M et al. Growth and Neuro developmental Out-come of VLBW Infants at 1 Year Corrected Age. Indi-an Pediatr :2013;50: 573;467

Motta MEFA et al. Does birth weight affect nutrition-al status at the end of first year of life? Jornal de Pe-diatria - Vol. 81, No.5, 2005; 377-382

Guo S S, Roche A F, Chumlea W C, Casey P H, Moor W M. Growth in weight, recumbent length and head circumference for preterm low birth weight infants during the first three years of life using gestation ad-justed ages. Early Hum Dev. 1997 Feb; 47 (3):305-25

Kattula D, Sarkar R, Sivarathinaswamy P, et al. The first 1000 days of life: prenatal and postnatal risk fac-tors for morbidity and growth in a birth cohort in southern India. BMJ Open 2014;4:e005404. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014- 005404

Downloads

Published

2014-12-31

How to Cite

1.
Borah M, Baruah R. Physical Growth of Low-Birth-Weight Babies in First Six Months of Life: A Longitudinal Study in A Rural Block of Assam. Natl J Community Med [Internet]. 2014 Dec. 31 [cited 2024 Nov. 21];5(04):397-400. Available from: https://njcmindia.com/index.php/file/article/view/1421

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles