Growth, Nutritional Status, and Feeding Difficulties in Children with Cerebral Palsy
Doctoral thesis
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/293341Utgivelsesdato
2015Metadata
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Sammendrag
Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common cause of chronic motor disability in childhood,
and is caused by an early injury affecting the parts of the brain responsible for body
movement and control. In addition to motor problems, children with CP often struggle
with conditions such as epilepsy, chronic pain, feeding difficulties, and poor growth.
Despite extensive research, the cause of a child’s cerebral palsy is often unknown, but
for most children the brain injury has occurred before birth. Many children with CP are
small at birth, which could be a result of poor nutritional supply as a fetus, but could
also be due to the brain injury.
This thesis is based on data from the Cerebral Palsy Registry of Norway (CPRN), five
European CP registries that are a part of the Surveillance of Cerebral Palsy in Europe
collaboration (SCPE) and the Medical Birth Registry of Norway (MBRN). The aim of
this thesis was to assess growth, prevalence of feeding difficulties and prevalence of
gastrostomy tube feeding in a population of children with cerebral palsy. An additional
aim was to study how fetal growth, assessed by birth weight, length, and head
circumference, was associated with the risk of CP in term-born children.
The results confirm previously published studies that have shown that feeding
difficulties are common in children with CP and that those problems are more
significant in children with poor speech and poor motor and hand function. The data
further reveal that difficulties are associated with poor growth and nutritional status: a
considerable proportion of the children with the highest degree of disability had poor
nutritional status. Nutritional status was calculated from body mass index (BMI) and not
by better validated methods; hence, the results regarding poor nutritional status should
be interpreted with caution. A low BMI in children with CP may not be due to
malnutrition, but may be explained by low muscle and bone mass as a direct result of
the neurological damage.
In Norway, over the last decades the use of gastrostomy tube feeding has increased in
order to improve nutrition in children with CP. Insertion of gastrostomy tube at an early age was associated with improved growth. Within Europe there were significant
variations in the use of tube feeding as well as age at insertion. Interestingly, despite
how common feeding difficulties are in this group of children, feeding abilities was not
assessed in a standardized way in the different European cohorts.
Rates of overweight and obesity are increasing in the CP population. Overweight and
obesity will add to children’s existing functional limitations, and in the long-term
excessive weight may lead to lifestyle-related chronic illnesses.
Small newborns (i.e. those with low birth weight, length, and head circumference) have
increased risk of CP. The finding is especially evident in the case of spastic unilateral
and spastic diplegic subtypes, and is consistent with the notion that the brain injury
occurs before delivery, although it could not determine whether the studied newborns’
poor growth was a result of or the cause of their brain injury. Also children who were
large at birth were at increased risk of CP, especially the CP subtypes spastic
quadriplegia and dyskinesia, which may be consistent with complicated deliveries.
For many children with CP, growth deviations begin already in the fetal period. To date,
we have not been able to determine whether the fetal growth deviations cause the brain
injury or vice versa. Later in life, as an infant, child, and teenager, many children with
CP will experience feeding difficulties and poor growth. Moreover, an increasing
proportion of children with CP are overweight and obese. Based on the findings in this
thesis greater emphasis should be placed on growth and nutrition in children with CP.
Being either underweight or overweight at a critical phase in life is very unfortunate and
could affect these children’s health and quality of life in both the short-term and longterm.