Kwashiorkor
| Kwashiorkor | |
|---|---|
| A young girl with kwashiorkor in a relief camp during the Nigerian Civil War | |
| Specialty | Pediatrics |
Kwashiorkor (/ˌkwɒʃiˈɔːrkɔːr, -kər/ KWOSH-ee-OR-kor, -kər, is also KWASH-) is a form of severe protein malnutrition characterized by edema and an enlarged liver with fatty infiltrates. It is thought to be caused by sufficient calorie intake, but with insufficient protein consumption (or lack of good quality protein), which distinguishes it from marasmus. Recent studies have found that a lack of antioxidant micronutrients such as β-carotene, lycopene, other carotenoids, and vitamin C as well as the presence of aflatoxins may play a role in the development of the disease. However, the exact cause of kwashiorkor is still unknown. Inadequate food supply is correlated with kwashiorkor; occurrences in high-income countries are rare. It occurs amongst weaning children to ages of about five years old.
Conditions analogous to kwashiorkor were well documented around the world throughout history. The disease's first formal description was published by Jamaican pediatrician Cicely Williams in 1933. She was the first to research kwashiorkor, and to suggest that it might be a protein deficiency to differentiate it from other dietary deficiencies.
The name, introduced by Williams in 1935, was derived from the Ga language of coastal Ghana, translated as "the sickness the baby gets when the new baby comes" or "the disease of the deposed child", and reflecting the development of the condition in an older child who has been weaned from the breast when a younger sibling comes. Breast milk contains amino acids vital to a child's growth. In at-risk populations, kwashiorkor is most likely to develop after children are weaned from breast milk and begin consuming a diet high in carbohydrates, including maize, cassava, or rice.