Background
The objective of this study was to investigate some biomarkers of renal function and blood pressure in children who had recovered from undernutrition.
Methods
This was cross-sectional, comparative study in which a convenience sample of children of both genders (n = 126; age range 6–16 years) treated at the Centre for Nutritional Recovery and Education (São Paulo, Brazil) was used. These children were classified into four groups for analysis: (1) children who were well nourished (control group; n = 50), (2) those showing stunted growth (stunted group; n = 22), (3) those who were underweight (underweight group; n = 23) and (4) those who had recovered from undernutrition (recovered group; n = 31).
Results
No between-group differences were found for mean levels of albuminuria, serum creatinine and cystatin C, and similar mean estimates of glomerular filtration rate (eGFR; using either creatinine, cystatin C or both). Almost 14% of the stunted group, 4% of the underweight group and 3% of the recovered group had albuminuria of >30 mg/g creatinine (chi-square p = 0.034); none of the control children showed albuminuria of >30 mg/g creatinine. Mean systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) adjusted for age and gender of the children in the stunted [SBP (95% confidence interval): 92 (88–96) mmHg; DBP: 47 (44–49) mmHg] and recovered [SBP: 93 (90–96) mmHg; DBP: 49 (47–51) mmHg] groups were significantly lower than those of the controls [SBP: 98 (95–100) mmHg, P = 0.027; DBP: 53 (52–55) mmHg, P = 0.001]. After additional adjustment for height, mean DBP remained significantly lower in the recovered group compared with the control group [49 (46–51) vs. 53 (51–55) mmHg, respectively; P = 0.018). Logistic regression analysis showed that the stunted group had a 8.4-fold higher chance of developing albuminuria (>10 mg/g creatinine) than the control children (P = 0.006).
Conclusions
No alterations in renal function were found in underweight children and those who had recovered from undernutrition, whereas children with stunted growth presented with a greater risk for albuminuria. A lower DBP was found in children with stunted growth and those who had recovered from undernutrition.