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Reuniting overnutrition and undernutrition,macronutrients, and micronutrients
Authors:Miji Kim  Anam Basharat  Ramchandani Santosh  Syed F. Mehdi  Zanali Razvi  Sun K. Yoo  Barbara Lowell  Amrat Kumar  Wunnie Brima  Ann Danoff  Rachel Dankner  Michael Bergman  Valentin A. Pavlov  Huan Yang  Jesse Roth
Abstract:
Over‐nutrition and its late consequences are a dominant theme in medicine today. In addition to the health hazards brought on by over‐nutrition, the medical community has recently accumulated a roster of health benefits with obesity, grouped under “obesity paradox.” Throughout the world and throughout history until the 20th century, under‐nutrition was a dominant evolutionary force. Under‐nutrition brings with it a mix of benefits and detriments that are opposite to and continuous with those of over‐nutrition. This continuum yields J‐shaped or U‐shaped curves relating body mass index to mortality. The overweight have an elevated risk of dying in middle age of degenerative diseases while the underweight are at increased risk of premature death from infectious conditions. Micronutrient deficiencies, major concerns of nutritional science in the 20th century, are being neglected. This “hidden hunger” is now surprisingly prevalent in all weight groups, even among the overweight. Because micronutrient replacement is safe, inexpensive, and predictably effective, it is now an exceptionally attractive target for therapy across the spectrum of weight and age. Nutrition‐related conditions worthy of special attention from caregivers include excess vitamin A, excess vitamin D, and deficiency of magnesium.
Keywords:infectious diseases  micronutrients  obesity  obesity paradox  overnutrition  undernutrition
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