Case 15- Stress and nutrients Flashcards
Vitamin D deficiency (rickets)
Delay or failure of mineralisation of the cartilagious growth plates in the growing child. Growth plate becomes wide and irregular. ‘Bow legs’ or ‘knock knees.’ They usually have a height and weight below the 3rd percentile.
Factors predisposing you to rickets
High latitude, lack of sunlight, infants whose mothers were vitamin D deficient in pregnancy, prolonged breast feeding without vitamin D supplementation, low dietary calcium intake, increased melanin pigmentation.
Rickets treatment
- Oral: Aggressive treatment involving calcium and/or vitamin D supplements
- IM: having a vitamin D injection each 6 months/year (this is only necessary if the child cannot take the supplements by mouth or has intestinal or liver disease)
Rickets prevention- babies
- If exclusively breast-feeding, must consume vitamin D supplement of 5ug/day (oral or drops)
- Formula feeds must have vitamin D added, calcium intake should be maintained
Osteomalacia
Vitamin D deficiency. A failure of bone mineralisation and presents as an excess of poorly calcified osteoid. Osteoid is the bone protein matrix, composed primarily of type 1 collagen. Adult disease of vitamin D deficiency.
Vitamin E deficiency
- Mild deficiencies affect the skin- dermatitis
- Sever deficiency causes neuropathy and haemorrhaging
- Selenium should be given with vitamin E, they work to prevent and repair cell damage in the body
Vitamin C deficiency
Scurvy which is characterised by general weakness, anaemia, gingivitis and skin haemorrhaging
Vitamin K deficiency
Increases prothrombin (clotting) time, in serious conditions this could cause a haemorrhagic event. Seen mostly in GI disorders like Cystic fibrosis, IBD (Crohns), chronic pancreatitis, liver disease, using warfarin.
Why are newborn infants at risk of vit K deficiency
Poor placental transfer, hepatic immaturity, low vit K content in breast milk. Prevented by viamin K (oral or IM injection) within 6 hours of birth.
Thiamin deficiency (vitamin B1)
Beri Beri, impaired muscle contractions. Impaired cardiac function, oedema and muscle twitches. Decreased neurological function and memory loss. Due to heavy alcohol consumption with inadequate food consumption. Alcohol interferes with absorption (Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome), the poor and elderly are at risk for not eating sufficient energy
Riboflan deficiency (vitamin B2)
Deficiencies are rare though people may take in marginal amounts. Drug and alcohol users and restricted calory intake. The collection of deficiencies is caused Ariboflavinosis which is inflammation of the mucous membranes of the oral cavity and pharynx.
Niacin deficiency (vitamin B3)
Pellagra. Dermatitis symptoms include: red, flaky skin, areas of discoloration ranging from red to brown, thick, crusty, scaly or cracked skin. International health issue but rare. The rash forms on the face, lips, feet or hands. In some people it forms around the neck (casal neck).
Vitamin B12 deficiency symptoms
Rare, bacterial synthesis in gut. Causes pernicious anaemia, bone marrow cells become abnormally large, neutrophils develop multi-lobed nuclei, megoblastic red blood cells. A form of megoblastic anaemia, causes chronic fatigue. There is demyelination of nerves causing progressive myopathy. There may be an increased risk of cancer (via methylation, dUMP metabolism and ROS).
Folate deficiency (vitamin B9)
Megaloblastic anaemia. Megaloblastic enterocytes cause malabsorption and diarrhoea. No effect on myelination. Raised plasma homoCys levels – an important risk factor for CVD and stroke. Low plasma folate is associated with neural tube defects in babies. Increased risk of colo-rectal cancer.
Stress
The bodys response to a disruption in equilibrium by an external demand. Stress encompasses: the input (stress stimuli), the processing system (i.e. areas of the brain) and output (stress response)
The 2 major sub groups of stressors
- Physical/environmental stressors- put strain on the body i.e. cold, hot, injury, chronic illness
- Psychological stressors- events, situations, individuals or comments that we interpret as negative or threatening i.e. not finding a babysitter
Selye’s General adaption syndrome
Stage 1- Acute stress- Alarm reaction- Fight or flight
Stage 2- Episodic stress- Resistance- Struggle to overcome
Stage 3- chronic stress- Exhaustion- Fatigue, irritability, vulnerable to illness
Acute stress
Most common form of stress, a response to demands of the past or anticipated demands in the future. A physical response that prepares the individual to be alert and ready to escape danger. When the stressful situation ends, endocrine signals switch off the stress response and the body returns to normal.
Episodic stress
Extended over arousal due to repeated acute stress. This may appear as hostility, potentially deteriorating interpersonal relationships. Particular environments may be associated with stress like the workplace
Chronic stress
When an individuals fails to see a way out of a threatening or miserable situation. Due to unrelenting demands over a long period. May relate to a traumatic, early childhood experience
Acute stress response
The activation of the sympathetic nervous system causes the release of Catecholamines (adrenaline) from the adrenal medulla. The tissue effect is mediated by activation of adrenergic receptors.