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1 0, for stunting and 22.1%, 19.4 to 24.8, for underweight).
2 y as separate outcomes (compared with normal/underweight).
3 reater severity of hypertension and low BMI (underweight).
4 early 39% at the lowest wealth quintile were underweight.
5 t, 7% were underweight, and 9% were severely underweight.
6 n child-growth outcomes such as stunting and underweight.
7 eeks, 37% were overweight/obese, and 3% were underweight.
8 t failure if they had severe disease or were underweight.
9 z score or on rates of stunting, wasting, or underweight.
10 compare incidences of stunting, wasting, and underweight.
11 se districts more women were obese than were underweight.
12  in which Indian women are most likely to be underweight.
13  42% (34-50) for wasting and 54% (49-59) for underweight.
14 eight for age, weight for age, stunting, and underweight.
15 tamin A deficiencies, stunting, wasting, and underweight.
16 this risk comparable to never being obese or underweight.
17 od is associated with stunting, wasting, and underweight.
18 ented >/= 3 mo before conception and was not underweight.
19 , 35% overweight, 36% normal weight, and 12% underweight.
20 19.6) in those who were stunted, wasted, and underweight.
21 derweight; and 9.40 (8.02, 11.03) for severe underweight.
22 er determinant of mortality than stunting or underweight.
23 y was markedly increased in association with underweight.
24 re anemia were malaria, poor sanitation, and underweight.
25 5% CI) of mortality was 1.62 (1.50-1.74) for underweight, 0.73 (0.70-0.77) for overweight, 0.61 (0.57
26 zard ratios were 1.06 (95% CI, 0.44-2.28) in underweight, 1.27 (95% CI, 0.87-1.85) in overweight, and
27  confidence interval [95% CI], 0.97-6.50) in underweight, 1.68 (95% CI, 0.92-3.06) in overweight, and
28 o less than 16.0 kg for women categorized as underweight; 10.0 kg to less than 18.0 kg for normal wei
29                                              Underweight (13%), wasting (4%), and stunting (33%) were
30 s of BMI-defined obesity in this cohort were underweight (13.1%), normal weight (41.4%), overweight (
31 9/100,000), normal weight (154/100,000), and underweight (141/100,000) adolescents.
32                  Subjects were classified as underweight (17.9%), normal weight (54.2%), overweight (
33 m, 95% CI -1.78 to -0.65), more likely to be underweight (18 percentage points, 15-21) and anaemic (8
34 th Organization definitions: less than 18.5 (underweight), 18.5 to 29.9 (normal weight), 30 to 34.9 (
35 eight (kg)/height (m)(2)) of less than 18.5 (underweight), 18.5-24.9 (normal weight), 25.0-29.9 (over
36         Nutritional status assessment showed underweight (2.2%), low weight (12.7%), overweight (12.7
37 95% Confidence Interval 1.28, 1.81) for mild underweight; 2.63 (2.20, 3.14) for moderate underweight;
38 Prepregnancy BMI was distributed as follows: underweight, 3.2%; normal weight, 47.5%; overweight, 25.
39 s were included (mean age: 81 y; women: 48%; underweight: 30%; normal weight: 23%; overweight: 33%; o
40 01 HIV/AIDS patients, including 1439 (28.2%) underweight, 3047 (59.7%) normal-weight, 548 (10.7%) ove
41 ly proportional to body mass index category: underweight (31%), normal weight (24%), overweight (19%)
42 lyses, of whom 4,661 (4%) were classified as underweight, 32,134 (30%) as normal weight, 32,278 (30%)
43  assessable body mass index measurements: 6% underweight, 33% normal weight, 28% overweight, and 33%
44 our population, OWO was far more common than underweight (39.7% vs. 3.6%).
45  information on BMI was available, 9.7% were underweight, 39.0% were of normal weight, 34.5% were ove
46 at the region had high rates of stunting and underweight (40% and 31% of children aged <5 years had a
47 31 patients met inclusion criteria; 12% were underweight, 50% normal weight, 11% overweight, and 27%
48                            Four percent were underweight, 52% were normal weight, 16% were overweight
49  categories were 2.4% at BMI less than 18.5 (underweight), 61.8% at BMI of 18.5 to 24.9 (normal weigh
50  4 groups based on adjusted BMI percentiles: underweight (8.3%), normal weight (73.9%), overweight (1
51 00, 1.06; P = 0.04), 5% higher odds of being underweight (95% CI: 1.02, 1.09; P < 0.01), and 9% highe
52  (95% CI 1.08-1.92; P < .05), and the OR for underweight adolescents was 0.84 (95% CI 0.65-1.09; P =
53 ed the prevalences of stunting, wasting, and underweight among children and of underweight, overweigh
54 tage points higher than the average fraction underweight among women 15-49 y old.
55                                    Currently underweight AN participants explicitly wanted high-calor
56 ols; this pattern was partially preserved in underweight AN patients but not in weight-restored ones.
57 e significantly higher in hedonic eating; in underweight AN patients, 2-arachidonoylglycerol concentr
58                                              Underweight AN showed abnormal neural activity in striat
59                                              Underweight AN showed slower response times for earlier
60  stunting analysis, 397,080 children for the underweight analysis, 384,163 children for the wasting a
61 I included in this cohort, 5,678 (9.8%) were underweight and 51,896 (90.2%) were normal weight at bas
62 dy period, from 38.7% (95% CI 33.5-44.0) for underweight and 57.1% (51.9-62.4) for stunting.
63 and palmitoylethanolamide were measured in 7 underweight and 7 weight-restored AN patients after eati
64 elevated in adolescent anorexia nervosa when underweight and after weight restoration.
65 f SMM was within the IOM recommendations for underweight and class 2 obesity, but above the IOM recom
66 ip between OMT and BMI with patients who are underweight and extremely obese less likely to receive O
67 m disorders and mirror phenotypes of obesity/underweight and macrocephaly/microcephaly.
68 atients, and (2) is the relationship between underweight and mortality also observed in patients with
69 tween combinations of stunting, wasting, and underweight and mortality among children <5 y of age.
70 e of PD BMI SDS tended to increase on CPD in underweight and normal weight children, whereas it decre
71 to compare short- and long-term mortality in underweight and normal weight patients (n = 57,574).
72                          Survival curves for underweight and normal weight patients separated early a
73 there was significant difference between the underweight and normal-weight groups after adjustment fo
74 on was associated with lower mortality among underweight and normal-weight patients.
75 vigorous exercise reduced the risk of LGA in underweight and normal-weight women only and was not ass
76 hs; similar findings were observed among the underweight and normal-weight women, but no associations
77 SGA and decreased risk of LGA but only among underweight and normal-weight women.
78 e outcome (P<0.0001) were higher in severely underweight and obese subjects.
79                          Among Danish women, underweight and obesity were associated with increased r
80 al geographic and socioeconomic variation in underweight and overweight and/or obesity prevalence in
81                                         Both underweight and overweight are prevalent in pediatric ES
82                                              Underweight and overweight or obesity (OWO) were defined
83  -15.0+/-4.1%; P<0.001) compared with normal/underweight and overweight patients, respectively.
84               The final samples for wasting, underweight and stunting include 668.463, 693.376, and 6
85 king, consuming smokeless tobacco, and being underweight and the district-level predictors of living
86 ted patients suggested a direct link between underweight and the mortality rate of AIDS.
87  In addition, 13.8% of women start pregnancy underweight and the rate of obesity increases during pre
88                     Elderly persons who were underweight and those who were obese had a significantly
89 1.000) for stunting, 0.989 (0.985-0.992) for underweight, and 0.983 (0.979-0.986) for wasting.
90 0.995) for stunting, 0.986 (0.982-0.990) for underweight, and 0.984 (0.981-0.986) for wasting.
91 1.004) for stunting, 0.999 (0.991-1.008) for underweight, and 0.991 (0.978-1.004) for wasting.
92 sizes were 462,854 for stunting, 485,152 for underweight, and 459,538 for wasting.
93  overweight, 53% were normal weight, 7% were underweight, and 9% were severely underweight.
94 imate-related increases in the prevalence of underweight, and most climate-related deaths were projec
95 stence of 19 combinations of women's anemia, underweight, and overweight and children's stunting, und
96                    The overall prevalence of underweight, and overweight/obesity at start of CPD was
97 ., breast milk substitutes, infection rates, underweight, and pubertal timing) differ between these s
98        The secondary outcomes were stunting, underweight, and wasting at a 12 month follow-up.
99 ociations between maternal BMI and stunting, underweight, and wasting in U5s over time.
100 hs, and the outcome variables were stunting, underweight, and wasting.
101 ure to first-line ART, entry to adolescence, underweight, and/or undetectable drug levels were at hig
102  underweight; 2.63 (2.20, 3.14) for moderate underweight; and 9.40 (8.02, 11.03) for severe underweig
103 f LOS >3 days were higher in adults who were underweight (aOR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.4), and odds of mec
104  ratio [aOR], 2.2), unvaccinated (aOR, 3.7), underweight (aOR, 6.3), and too young to be immunized (a
105 sting: aOR 0.90, 95% CI 0.83-0.99, p = 0.03; underweight: aOR 0.85, 95% CI 0.80-0.90, p < 0.001; any
106                                  Obesity and underweight are contraindications to lung transplantatio
107  While dual burdens of anemia, stunting, and underweight are prevalent, there is no evidence of clust
108 ldren (5.23, 2.61-10.5), fewer children were underweight at 18 months (0.81, 0.66-0.99), and fewer in
109                   Being either overweight or underweight at ART initiation was associated with height
110 ng the F2 generation, IUGR lineage rats were underweight at birth (6.7 vs. 8.0 g, P < 0.0001) and obe
111                               Being obese or underweight at diagnosis and for >/= 50% of the time bet
112 ertain events, describes humans' tendency to underweight base rate (prior) relative to individuating
113 elated with individuals' overall tendency to underweight base rate.
114                                              Underweight BMI is an important risk factor for mortalit
115                                     Severely underweight BMI was associated with increased unplanned
116                                  Obesity and underweight BMI were associated with increased risk of c
117 e high-risk from low-risk individuals within underweight (BMI < 18.5 kg/m(2)) or obese (BMI >= 30 kg/
118 782 acute ischemic stroke patients, 282 were underweight (BMI < 18.5 kg/m(2)), 2306 were normal-weigh
119  overweight/obese (BMI, >/= 25), and 8% were underweight (BMI < 18.5) at baseline.
120                                              Underweight (BMI < 18.5) was associated with a 35% incre
121 evious 6 mo, and considered 4 BMI categories-underweight (BMI < 22.5), normal weight (BMI = 22.5-24.9
122 nal body mass index (BMI) was categorized as underweight (BMI <18.5 kg/m(2)), normal weight (BMI 18.5
123                                        Being underweight (BMI <18.5) was associated with increased ri
124 nfections at multiple and unspecified sites (underweight (BMI <18.5): hazard ratio (HR) = 4.26, 95% c
125  7809 (4.0%) were categorized at baseline as underweight (BMI <18.5); 133 788 (68.0%), normal weight
126  a nonlinear fashion, with patients who were underweight (BMI <18.5; HR, 2.65; 95% CI, 1.63-4.31) and
127 ing to prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) in underweight (BMI<18.5 kg/m(2)), normal weight (BMI=18.5-
128           Five groups were stratified by BMI-underweight (BMI, <18.5 kg/m(2)), normal (BMI, 18.5-24.9
129 as found between maternal BMI categorized as underweight [BMI (kg/m(2)) <18.5], healthy BMI (BMI: 18.
130 tegorized based on standard criteria (normal/underweight, BMI<25 kg/m(2) [n=486]; overweight, 25</=BM
131 nesthesiologists risk classification 4 or 5, underweight body mass index, noncardiac surgery, history
132           Body mass index in six categories: underweight (body mass index < 18.5 kg/m), normal weight
133 .9 kg/m, hospital mortality was higher among underweight (body mass index, < 18.5; relative risk, 1.3
134 % CI: 3.1, 7.1) in those who were wasted and underweight but not stunted; and 12.3 (95% CI: 7.7, 19.6
135 d and underweight but not wasted; wasted and underweight but not stunted; and stunted, wasted, and un
136 .6, 4.3) among children who were stunted and underweight but not wasted; 4.7 (95% CI: 3.1, 7.1) in th
137 ; wasted only; underweight only; stunted and underweight but not wasted; wasted and underweight but n
138               We found 52.2% of CLD patients underweight by weight for age (W/A); 50.2% were stunted
139           The prevalence of the obese mother-underweight child pair was low.
140 ified relationship among age, fertility, and underweight; childbearing is concentrated in the narrow
141 ed the higher risk of death in obese but not underweight children (HR, 1.09; 95% CI, 0.96 to 1.24).
142                                              Underweight children had a higher risk of mortality and
143 linics were screened, and between six and 25 underweight children were enrolled from each clinic.
144                                    Obese and underweight children were less likely to receive a kidne
145 weight, and available formulations, in which underweight children would receive the same drug doses a
146        Even if the effect were greater among underweight children, a nontargeted intervention would r
147                            Participants were underweight children, defined as a weight-for-age Z scor
148                          From the 2423 (20%) underweight children, we excluded 656 (27%) children who
149 that 42.2% of prepregnant women in India are underweight compared with 16.5% of prepregnant women in
150 n 1990 to tenth place in 2010, and childhood underweight declined from fifth to 11th place.
151 eased from 14% to 18%, whereas prevalence of underweight decreased from 12% to 9% during this period.
152 ht but not stunted; and stunted, wasted, and underweight (deficit defined as < -2 z scores).
153                                 In addition, underweight during course of the disease (p=0.012) was a
154 a simultaneous decrease in the prevalence of underweight (estimated decrease of 0.06% per year, 95% C
155 of the following characteristics: clinically underweight, exhaustion, low energy expenditure, slow wa
156       Three children, all HIV-infected, were underweight for age.
157                       Levels of prepregnancy underweight for India are almost seven percentage points
158 trition on lung function was observed in the underweight group and in pancreatic- insufficient patien
159 djusted HR of coronary heart disease for the underweight group was 1.25 (1.05-1.49) in women and 1.09
160 t increment in BMI, 1.10 (0.91-1.32) for the underweight group, 0.99 (0.92-1.07) for the overweight g
161 e regression analyses showed that within the underweight group, an increase in BMI resulted in improv
162                 In contrast, adults who were underweight had longer LOS.
163                 Child stunting, wasting, and underweight have been individually associated with incre
164 tios for hospital discharge were lower among underweight (hazard ratio, 0.71; p < 0.001) and obese (h
165 ften overweight low probability outcomes and underweight high probability outcomes.
166 als overweighted low probability rewards and underweighted high probability rewards.
167  an age of onset dependent influence towards underweight, higher disease activity and a more intensiv
168 fidence interval [95% CI], 1.03 to 1.32) and underweight (HR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.09 to 1.47) children th
169 no association was observed between maternal underweight (HR, 1.46; 95% CI, 0.90-2.35), overweight (H
170  95% CI: 3.38, 7.95), and fungal infections (underweight: HR = 3.19, 95% CI: 1.53, 6.66).
171 terization of I-Rai1 mice showed significant underweight, hyperactivity and impaired learning and mem
172 hin 2 months of age and became malnourished, underweight, hypoglycemic, and hypothermic.
173 eady increase since 1980 and exceeds that of underweight in all regions.
174  year of survey on the risks of stunting and underweight in children.
175                         22% of children were underweight in CLTS compared with 26% in control village
176                                        Being underweight in middle age and old age carries an increas
177 s increased with obesity in infants and with underweight in older children.
178 s in Georgia, Chile, and China, and the most underweight in rural areas of Timor-Leste, India, Niger,
179 ting of prior information is not chronically underweighted in autism, as proposed by simple Bayesian
180  experimental approaches suggest that Tyr is underweighted in the prediction algorithm due to the abs
181 nted as obese, overweight, normal weight, or underweight, in contrast to patients who had none of the
182 tricts, more women were overweight than were underweight; in 49 of these districts more women were ob
183 l-weight patients and increased mortality in underweight individuals (odds ratio, 1.51; 95% confidenc
184 ediating aspects of cognitive dysfunction in underweight individuals with AN.
185 rved in pregnant women prior to the birth of underweight infants and enabling the production of proge
186 robiota from healthy or severely stunted and underweight infants; age- and growth-discriminatory taxa
187 eficiency, malaria, breastfeeding, stunting, underweight, inflammation, low socioeconomic status, and
188 n to the salient gift offer, causing them to underweight less salient intrinsic motives.
189  variables of stunting (low height-for-age), underweight (low weight-for-age), wasting (low weight-fo
190 Prevention body mass index z score criteria: underweight (&lt; -1.89), normal weight (-1.89 to +1.04), o
191 x (BMI; weight (kg)/height (m)2) categories (underweight (&lt;-2 standard deviations (SDs) of BMI z scor
192 line body mass index (BMI) was classified as underweight (&lt;18.5 kg/m(2)), normal (18.5-24.9 kg/m(2)),
193                        We used BMI to assess underweight (&lt;18.5 kg/m(2)), overweight (>/=23.0 to <27.
194 eight in meters squared) categories included underweight (&lt;18.5), normal BMI (18.5-24.9), overweight
195 e grouped into predefined weight categories: underweight (&lt;1st percentile), reference (1st-74th perce
196           We used an inclusive definition of underweight (&lt;20 kg/m(2)) to achieve sufficient case num
197 ain a percentile ranking and then grouped as underweight (&lt;5th percentile), normal weight (5th percen
198         Reported drought was associated with underweight (marginal risk ratio (RR) = 1.18, 95% confid
199 precipitation trends were protective against underweight (marginal RR per 50-mm increase = 0.94, 95%
200 5; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.10); in 2011, children of underweight mothers had a 21% higher risk of being stunt
201                         In 1996, children of underweight mothers had a 5% higher risk of being stunte
202                                              Underweight, normal weight, overweight, and obesity were
203 types defined by body mass index categories (underweight, normal weight, overweight, and obesity) and
204      Survival was estimated by BMI category (underweight, normal weight, overweight, class 1 obesity,
205  the recommendations, were the following for underweight, normal weight, overweight, class 1 obesity,
206 that were stratified by BMI in 5 categories, underweight, normal weight, overweight, obese, and morbi
207 ients were categorized by body mass index as underweight, normal weight, overweight, or obese.
208                  The cumulative mortality of underweight, normal-weight, and overweight were 2.4/100
209 urements as a function of gestational age in underweight, normal-weight, overweight, and obese class
210       In mutually adjusted models, male sex, underweight, obesity, education, poor self-rated health,
211  Obese (odds ratio, 1.28; P=0.008), severely underweight (odds ratio, 1.29; P<0.0001), and underweigh
212 nderweight (odds ratio, 1.29; P<0.0001), and underweight (odds ratio, 1.39; P=0.002) subjects were as
213  the odds of 60-day mortality were higher in underweight (odds ratio, 1.53; p < 0.001) children.
214  hospital-acquired infections were higher in underweight (odds ratio, 1.88; p = 0.008) and obese (odd
215 sociated with a reduced probability of being underweight of 1.4 percentage points (95% confidence int
216 ith overweighting of small probabilities and underweighting of large probabilities.
217 ons: no deficits; stunted only; wasted only; underweight only; stunted and underweight but not wasted
218  four BMI categories from 1990 through 2030: underweight or normal weight (BMI [the weight in kilogra
219 0.56 (95% CI: 0.43, 0.73) in adults who were underweight or normal weight, 0.67 (95% CI: 0.57, 0.79)
220  on the basis of measured height and weight (underweight or normal weight, overweight, and obesity).
221 ry interventions in low-income countries and underweight or nutritionally at-risk populations increas
222                            Classification as underweight or obese was associated with higher risk of
223 ysical activity guidelines, and being either underweight or obese were associated with poor health st
224 sis initiation were more often white, girls, underweight or obese, and more likely to have GN as the
225              The proportion of children with underweight or stunting at 2 years of age halved during
226 liparity (OR(adj) 1.81, 95% CI [1.60-2.05]), underweight (OR(adj) 1.61, 95% CI [1.36-1.92]) and socio
227 , 95% CI: 1.62-2.20) and lower odds of being underweight (OR: 0.81, 95% CI: 0.70-0.93) than rural res
228 ratory infections (ARIs), stunting, wasting, underweight, or anaemia in children aged 0-5 years.
229 ght, and overweight and children's stunting, underweight, overweight, and anemia at the individual an
230 ces in 5-year cumulative incidence of CKD in underweight, overweight, and obese participants compared
231 1.11-1.84), and 1.76 (95% CI, 1.31-2.34) for underweight, overweight, and obese women.
232 sting, and underweight among children and of underweight, overweight, and obesity in women for all 14
233 7 (95% CI, 0.85-0.89), for patients who were underweight, overweight, obese, and extremely obese, res
234 se (P-trend < 0.001) and lower odds of being underweight (P-trend < 0.001).
235  (P = .05), while each 1-unit BMI gain among underweight participants was associated with a 9.32-mg/L
236 erleukin 18 (P = .02) levels were smaller in underweight participants.
237 mortality, with risks quickly increasing for underweight patients (body mass index < 18.5 kg/m).
238         Strategies to promote weight gain in underweight patients after AMI are worthy of testing.
239                                              Underweight patients are at higher risk of death after a
240                                              Underweight patients comprised 12 623 (1.1%), normal BMI
241                            After adjustment, underweight patients had a 13% higher risk of 30-d death
242                                              Underweight patients had significantly increased risks o
243                              Although normal/underweight patients had the worst overall survival (log
244 remained separate over 17 y, suggesting that underweight patients remained at a significant survival
245  obese and overweight patients and higher in underweight patients than in those with normal body mass
246 Crude mortality was significantly higher for underweight patients than normal weight patients at 30 d
247 tter volume and cortical thinning in acutely underweight patients to normalize following successful t
248                                              Underweight patients were excluded a priori.
249                                              Underweight patients were older, on average, than normal
250                                              Underweight patients without comorbidity had a 30-d adju
251 es explain the higher mortality after AMI in underweight patients, and (2) is the relationship betwee
252                         Compared with normal/underweight patients, obese patients were younger and mo
253 es mellitus, and dyslipidemia than normal or underweight patients.
254    Compared with people of a healthy weight, underweight people (BMI <20 kg/m(2)) had a 34% higher (9
255 being 0.33% (95% CI 0.24-0.42; p<0.0001) for underweight people, 0.50% (0.47-0.53; p<0.0001) for norm
256 ed increased inflammation, weight gain among underweight persons predicted reduced inflammation.
257 scoring, particularly overweighed apolar and underweighted polar terms.
258 eight and overweight populations than in the underweight population, with an adjusted hazard ratio (A
259 lity or better functional recovery but being underweight predicted unfavourable outcomes.
260 had a greater effect on preterm births among underweight pregnant women (BMI <18.5 kg/m(2); RR 0.84,
261 ate relevant individual characteristics (ie, underweight, probability of receiving oral rehydration t
262 49.1-53.1] in Niger), 22.7% (22.5-22.9) were underweight (ranging from 1.8% [1.3-2.3] in Jordan to 41
263    In many cases, experience leads people to underweight rare events.
264 to be overweight/obese and more likely to be underweight (referent: province-1).
265               The prevalence of stunting and underweight remained unacceptably high (30.0%, 95% CI 27
266 stis jirovecii infection, moderate or severe underweight, severe acute malnutrition, disease duration
267           AN, particularly during the acute, underweight state of the illness, has been associated wi
268                                     Obese or underweight status at start of each treatment course was
269 f the effect of azithromycin on mortality by underweight status was examined on the additive and mult
270 ight; however, no protection was found among underweight, stunted, or wasted children.
271                               All degrees of underweight, stunting and wasting were associated with s
272 bined Zn+MV did not reduce the incidences of underweight, stunting, or wasting in Tanzanian infants.
273 ribution on child mortality was assessed for underweight subgroups using weight-for-age Z-score (WAZ)
274  Although mortality rates were higher in the underweight subgroups, this study was unable to demonstr
275 2, 0.95; P = 0.02) than did normal-weight or underweight subjects.
276 cantly affected the degree to which subjects underweight the base rate of reward probability.
277                                              Underweighting the stimulus statistics decreased dyslexi
278 re considered at risk of uremic anorexia and underweight they are also exposed to the global obesity
279 7% (2706 of 7809) among women categorized as underweight to 61.1% (592 of 969) among women categorize
280 mass index (BMI) spans the entire range from underweight to obese.
281 djusted body mass index (BMI) percentiles as underweight (UW), at risk of UW (RUW), normal, overweigh
282                                     Baseline underweight (vs normal weight; RR, 2.41 [95% CI, 1.21-4.
283 The baseline prevalence of stunting was 14%, underweight was 8%, and wasting was 1% and did not diffe
284                                              Underweight was associated with 1.3 (p = 0.001) and 1.6
285                                              Underweight was associated with a higher risk of long-te
286 eater caudate prediction error response when underweight was associated with lower weight gain during
287                                              Underweight was defined as body mass index less than 18.
288 his large cohort of critically ill patients, underweight was independently associated with a higher h
289 multilevel Cox proportional hazard analysis, underweight was independently associated with a higher h
290                  The increased risk of CD in underweight was maintained up until age 60 not explained
291                                              Underweight was most prevalent in South and Southeast As
292                    We considered 3 outcomes (underweight, wasting, and stunting) and measured precipi
293                                     In those underweight (WAZ < -2) at baseline, cotrimoxazole use wa
294 ) times, respectively, more likely to become underweight (weight-for-age z score <-2) after adjustmen
295 f age, prevalences of stunting, wasting, and underweight were 19.8%, 6.0%, and 10.8%, respectively.
296  (69-83); the lowest figures for wasting and underweight were both less than 2.5% and the highest wer
297       Late dialysis start is associated with underweight, while enteral feeding can lead to obesity.
298  preterm birth compared with adequate GWG in underweight women aged 20-29 years (2.26 [1.06-4.85]) an
299      Increased incidence of sPTB occurred in underweight women gaining weight below quartile 1 (14.8%
300                               Interestingly, underweight women who older than 35 years with excess GW
301 ormal BMI) were 28.8 (95% CI, 12.2-47.2) for underweight women, 17.6 (95% CI, 10.5-25.1) for overweig
302  Adjusted ORs were 1.2 (95% CI, 1.0-1.3) for underweight women; 1.1 (95% CI, 1.1-1.2) for overweight

 
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