Abstract

BACKGROUND Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common of all congenital lesions and is the most common type of heart diseases among children. Children with congenital heart disease are at increased risk of underweight, stunted and wasted. Wasted is a reflection of acute malnutrition, stunted is a reflection of chronic malnutrition while underweight is a reflection of both.
 OBJECTIVE To describe the prevalence of underweight, stunted and wasted among children with acyanotic and cyanotic CHD, in tertiary center in Bali, Indonesia.
 METHODS
 An observational study with cross sectional approach was conducted in children under 5 years old with newly diagnosed CHD in Sanglah Hospital, Bali. Data were collected from medical records. Anthropometric z-scores based on WHO 2006 reference ranges were generated for each child including weight-for-age, height-for-age and weight-for-height z-scores. Diagnosis of CHD was retrieved based on echocardiography examination. The significance of the anthropometric status differences between acyanotic and cyanotic group were assessed using Pearson’s Chi Square.
 RESULTS
 From January 2017-December 2020, we found total 200 cases of CHD which 160 (80%) cases were acyanotic CHD with predominantly ventricle septal defect (38%) and 40 (20%) cases were cyanotic CHD with predominantly Tetralogy of Fallot with all variant (40%). The prevalence of underweight, stunted and wasted in acyanotic vs cyanotic CHD were: underweight (57.5% vs 40.0%, p=0.047), stunted (47.5% vs 65%, p=0.048) and wasted (67.5% vs 50%, p=0.039).
 CONCLUSION The prevalence of underweight, stunted and wasted among children with acyanotic and cyanotic CHD were high. Proportion of underweight and wasted were significantly higher in acyanotic CHD, while stunted was significantly higher in cyanotic CHD.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call