European journal of clinical nutrition
-
The first section of this paper reviews what is known about the roles of specific nutrients in the general linear growth faltering that occurs in developing countries. Those reviewed are energy, protein, zinc, iron, copper, iodine and vitamin A. For none of these nutrients was there clear, consistent evidence that supplementation with the nutrient benefited linear growth. ⋯ This point is illustrated with data from the Nutrition Collaborative Research Support Program (CRSP) and other reports. Most interventions with single nutrients have been tested on children older than the age when linear growth faltering is most rapid, that is, within a few months of birth. Possible reasons why growth stunting begins so early in life are presented, but these are mostly hypothetical because of the paucity of information on this topic.
-
In walking and in running the progression of the body involves at each step changes in kinetic energy, Ek, due to acceleration and deceleration, and changes of potential energy, Ep, due to vertical displacement. The energy costs of walking and running are minimized by two different mechanisms. In walking an alternate exchange of Ek and Ep takes place at each step, so that the muscles have only to restore the small part of the energy that is not recovered. ⋯ However, walking at low speed with a load not exceeding 5-10 per cent of the body weight is not more expensive than unloaded walking. Moreover, it has been observed that African women walking at their optimal speed can carry on their heads loads of up to 20 per cent of their body weight without any extra cost. A possible explanation of this finding could be that a different distribution of the body mass, with a higher position of the centre of gravity of the body, further increases the recovery of energy at each step.