Energy Malnutrition Ppt - Protein
[ Stabilization Phase: Days 1-7 ] [ Rehabilitation Phase: Weeks 2-6 ] ------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------- 1. Treat Hypoglycemia 2. Treat Hypothermia 3. Treat Dehydration 4. Correct Electrolyte Imbalance 7. Catch-up Growth Feeding (F-100) 5. Treat Infection 8. Sensory Stimulation & Play 6. Correct Micronutrient Deficiencies 9. Prepare for Discharge / Follow-up \ / \---> 10. Continuous Monitoring -/ The 10 Steps Explained 1. Treat/Prevent Hypoglycemia
Utilizing standard growth charts during routine pediatric visits to identify early growth faltering. Protein Energy Malnutrition Ppt
of baseline energy requirements) and correcting electrolyte levels before and during feeding. 8. Prevention and Control Strategies [ Stabilization Phase: Days 1-7 ] [ Rehabilitation
Long-term strategies to prevent recurrence, including improving nutritional education and food security. 6. Prevention Strategies Promoting exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months. Ensuring proper weaning and nutritious complementary foods. Educating families on nutrition. Improving sanitation to reduce infections. Regular monitoring of child growth. Key Takeaways for a PPT Treat Dehydration 4
Severe acute malnutrition manifests primarily as two distinct clinical phenotypes: and Kwashiorkor . Understanding their contrasting pathophysiology is essential. Marasmus: The Dry Form
Chronic infections (HIV, Tuberculosis), severe burns, or malignancies that drastically increase the body's calorie and protein requirements.
Atrophy of the thymus and peripheral lymphoid tissues leads to impaired cell-mediated immunity (Nutritional Thymectomy), leaving the child highly vulnerable to opportunistic infections. 6. Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis