Lecture 32 - Nutritional Disorders
Lecture 32 - Nutritional Disorders
Biochemistry of
Nutritional Disorders
Prof. Abayomi Akanji
Clinical Chemistry Unit
Department of Pathology
Faculty of Medicine
Kuwait University
Classification
Overnutrition
classically common in developed countries where
there is excessive caloric intake resulting in obesity
excess accumulation of body fat
Undernutrition
classically seen in developing countries where there
is inadequate caloric and protein intake
reduced body fat
also called protein-energy malnutrition
Occasionally seen in developed countries in certain
diseases and circumstances.
Obesity
• A state of excess adipose tissue mass
• Generally equivalent to increased body weight, but not
always so –
– lean but very muscular individuals may be overweight
without having increased adiposity.
• Body weights are distributed continuously in
populations, so that a medically meaningful distinction
between lean and obese is somewhat arbitrary.
BMI Classification
< 18.5 Underweight
18.5-24.9 Healthy
25-29.9 Overweight
30-39.9 Obese
≥ 40 Morbidly obese
Obesity as a Global Problem
Very important public health problem worldwide.
Prevalence in adults:
15-30% in Europe and North America
40-50% in Kuwait and Arabian Gulf
Other indices:
-- anthropometry (multiple skin-fold thickness; WC)
– densitometry (underwater weighing)
– Imaging : CT; MRI
– Bioelectrical impedance.
Humans:
The ob gene is present in humans and expressed in fat.
Several families with morbid, early-onset obesity caused by
inactivating mutations in leptin/leptin receptor
Mutations/polymorphisms in the leptin/leptin receptor genes not
important in common forms of obesity - most obese people have
increased leptin levels but not mutations of either leptin/receptor
►? functional "leptin resistance."
Specific syndromes associated with obesity
GENETIC
Gene encoding proopiomelanocortin (POMC); mutation ► severe obesity from
failure to synthesize -MSH, a hypothalamic neuropeptide that inhibits appetite
Genetic obesity syndromes in rodents:
tub gene (hypothalamic peptide ? function); mutation► late-onset obesity.
fat gene (carboxypeptidase E); mutation ► obesity
Complex human syndromes with defined inheritance assoc with obesity:
Prader-Willi syndrome: obesity, short stature, mental retardation,
hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, hyperphagia ► chromosome 15 deletion
Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome: obesity, mental retardation, retinitis
pigmentosa, polydactyly, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism
ENDOCRINE
• Cushing's Syndrome - central obesity, hypertension, and glucose intolerance
• Hypothyroidism - weight gain due to myxedema
• Insulinoma - gain weight from overeating to avoid hypoglycemia
• Craniopharyngioma/Hypothalamic Disorders: tumor, trauma, inflammation
► dysfunction of systems controlling satiety, hunger, energy expenditure
► varying degrees of obesity
Index of generalized obesity
• most widely used method = body mass index (BMI) -
weight/height2 (kg/m2)
• Mean BMI range for both men and women = 19 - 26 kg/m2 (in
most populations);
• at similar BMI, women have more body fat than men.
• BMI of 30 is threshold for obesity in both men and women.
• All-cause, metabolic, cancer, and cardiovascular morbidity begin
to rise with BMI ≥ 25,
► cut-off for obesity should be lowered.
• Overweight: BMI 25-30 - medically significant and worthy of
therapeutic intervention, especially in the presence of risk factors
such as hypertension and glucose intolerance.
Obese patients are
at ▲ CVD risk:
risk factors must be
treated early and
optimally. Effective
treatment to
prevent underlying
cause (body fat
accumulation)
would make better
clinical & economic
sense and is now
accepted as a
reasonable target
for drug
development
Indices of abdominal obesity
• Distribution of adipose tissue in different anatomic depots is important
• Intraabdominal and abdominal s.c. fat more significant than s.c. fat in
buttocks & lower extremities.
• Determined by waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) = waist/hip
circumference
• WHR >0.9 in women and >1.0 in men = Abnormal
• The major complications of obesity, including:
– insulin resistance & diabetes
– Hypertension & Hyperlipidaemia
– hyperandrogenism in women
are linked very strongly to intra-abdominal and/or upper body fat
High Low
The correlation of visceral fat with waist circumference is strong.
(Han TS et al. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 1997;21: 587-93)
BMI Classification
< 18.5 Underweight
18.5-24.9 Healthy
25-29.9 Overweight
30-39.9 Obese
≥ 40 Morbidly obese
The development of malnutrition
Malnutrition
• frequent component of acute and chronic illness
• found in 50% of all hospitalized adults.
• contributes to ▲in-hospital morbidity &
mortality in both medical and surgical patients
• Leads to frequent hospital admissions among
the elderly
• results from combination of starvation,
abnormal assimilation of the diet, the stress
response of illness, and abnormal nutrient
metabolism
Protein energy malnutrition (PEM)
Definition: Inadequate consumption of protein and energy as a
result of primary dietary deficiency or conditional deficiency
causing loss of body mass and adipose tissue
Primary deficiency more frequent from socio-economic and
geopolitical factors limiting quantity and quality of dietary intake
- parts of Asia, Latin America and Africa
Spectrum includes:
Kwashiorkor: protein deficiency with sufficient calorie intake
Marasmus: starvation due to overall lack of calories
Marasmic
< 60% marasmus
kwashiorkor
A malnourished child - Marasmus
Contrasting features of kwashiorkor and marasmus
hypoalbuminaemia hypoalbuminaemia
anaemia anaemia