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Failure to thrive (FTT) has been classified further into organic or nonorganic (functional) in etiology. Classically, organic FTT was said to reflect an underlying medical condition that resulted in growth failure, and nonorganic FTT was ascribed to environmental or social problems extrinsic to the child without any diagnosable medical illness. More recently, nonorganic FTT has been defined as an interactional problem between caretaker and child that results in the infants nutritional needs not being met. Nonorganic FTT has accounted for about 70% of total cases.
Today, the understanding has developed that these two categories are not mutually exclusive. A mixed etiology may be present when the effects of organic disease are combined with concurrent psychosocial problems. A child in a stressed family also may have a medical barrier to thrive or a child who has a physical problem causing poor growth may create stress in the family that exacerbates nutritional inadequacy. Therefore, the traditional classification of FTT may be a false dichotomy. It may be best to view FTT as a spectrum, with purely organic and purely environmental at the two extremes. More often, these factors overlap.
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