

Physicians often identify failure to thrive during routine office visits, when a child's growth parameters such as height and weight are not increasing appropriately on growth curves. Caretakers may express concern about poor weight gain or smaller size compared to peers of a similar age.

2.2 Malabsorption/caloric retention defectįailure to thrive is most commonly diagnosed before two years of age, when growth rates are highest, though FTT can present among children and adolescents of any age.In veterinary medicine, FTT is also referred to as ill-thrift. Failure to thrive is not a specific disease, but a sign of inadequate nutrition. While weight loss after birth is normal and most babies return to their birth weight by three weeks of age, clinical assessment for FTT is recommended for babies who lose more than 10% of their birth weight or do not return to their birth weight after three weeks. Another definition of FTT is a weight for age that is consistently below the 5th percentile or weight for age that falls by at least two major percentile lines on a growth chart. One definition describes FTT as a fall in one or more weight centile spaces on a World Health Organization (WHO) growth chart depending on birth weight or when weight is below the 2nd percentile of weight for age irrespective of birth weight. The term "failure to thrive" has been used in different ways, as there is no objective standard or universally accepted definition for when to diagnose FTT. FTT is usually defined in terms of weight, and can be evaluated either by a low weight for the child's age, or by a low rate of increase in the weight. Send us feedback.Standard growth chart for boys age 0-36 monthsįailure to thrive ( FTT), also known as weight faltering or faltering growth, indicates insufficient weight gain or absence of appropriate physical growth in children. These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'thriving.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. 2021 The New York Times identified 1,269 unregistered airstrips throughout Brazil’s Amazon rainforest in the last year, many of which supply a thriving illicit industry that has surged under President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil.

2021 California lawmakers this month unanimously passed a law to allow the return of what was once a thriving coastal resort that catered to Black residents when racial segregation barred them from many beaches. 2021 The legislation corrects the racial injustice that allowed the city to seize the land, where the Bruces once ran a thriving resort for Black travelers. 2021 The law confirms that the city’s taking of this shorefront land - on which the Bruces ran a thriving resort for Black beachgoers - was racially motivated and done under false and unlawful pretenses. Madeline Heim, Journal Sentinel, 27 June 2022 The bill confirms that the seizure of the land, on which Charles and Willa Bruce had built a thriving resort for Black families, was racially motivated and carried out under false pretenses.īryan Hood, Robb Report, 6 Oct. 2022 But in the upper stretches of the system, the picture is more complicated: aquatic plants are thriving and water clarity has improved despite higher discharge. 2022 Afghanistan was not going to transform into a prosperous, thriving, liberal democracy in the foreseeable future.ĭavid Petraeus, The Atlantic, 8 Aug. Recent Examples on the Web Her relationship with back-on boyfriend and father of her two children Travis Scott is especially thriving.Īlyssa Bailey, ELLE, 10 Aug.
