Environmental Enteropathy
Cross-source consensus on Environmental Enteropathy from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Evidence quality
Where it comes from
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- Environmental enteropathy is characterized by villus blunting, reduced nutrient absorption, and microbial translocation. — Impact of indispensable amino acid supplementation on gut function in children at high risk of environmental enteropathy: protocol for an international coordinated group of randomised controlled trials
- The trials cannot assess long-term outcomes such as improved linear growth because follow-up lasts only 28 days. — Impact of indispensable amino acid supplementation on gut function in children at high risk of environmental enteropathy: protocol for an international coordinated group of randomised controlled trials
- Environmental enteropathy arises from repeated exposure to enteric pathogens, especially where clean water and sanitation are inadequate, and is compounded by marginal dietary protein intake. — Impact of indispensable amino acid supplementation on gut function in children at high risk of environmental enteropathy: protocol for an international coordinated group of randomised controlled trials
- A high lactulose/rhamnose ratio indicates greater intestinal permeability in environmental enteropathy research. — Impact of indispensable amino acid supplementation on gut function in children at high risk of environmental enteropathy: protocol for an international coordinated group of randomised controlled trials
- Environmental enteropathy may raise requirements for high-quality dietary protein through inflammation, disrupted microbiota, and reduced absorptive capacity. — Impact of indispensable amino acid supplementation on gut function in children at high risk of environmental enteropathy: protocol for an international coordinated group of randomised controlled trials