Body circumferences as alternatives to skinfold measures of body fat distribution in children
Autor: | Ronald B. Harrist, Haley Kaplowitz, Jo Anne Grunbaum, Anne Marbella, Darwin R. Labarthe, William H. Mueller |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 1989 |
Předmět: |
Male
Aging medicine.medical_specialty Multivariate analysis Waist Physiology Epidemiology Body Mass Index Pelvis Classification of obesity Linear regression Genetics Humans Medicine Child business.industry Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health medicine.disease Obesity Trunk Surgery Skinfold Thickness Adipose Tissue Thigh Multivariate Analysis Arm Female business Canonical correlation Body mass index Demography |
Zdroj: | Annals of Human Biology. 16:495-506 |
ISSN: | 1464-5033 0301-4460 |
DOI: | 10.1080/03014468900000642 |
Popis: | The ratios of circumferences (waist/hip, waist/thigh) have been proposed in lieu of skinfold measurements for studies of obesity and body fat distribution in adults. The skinfold method has been used successfully in children to study the growth and development of patterns of body fat distribution, but circumferences have not. We studied the relationship between these two methodologies as indicators of body fat and its anatomical distribution among 365 normal children aged 6-11 years, using canonical correlation analysis. With this method, weighted vectors of four body circumferences on the one hand and five skinfolds on the other are formed in such a way that the correlation between the two sets of variables is maximized. Weights (regression coefficients) are assigned each variable and their strength and sign help us to select the best combination of circumferences which describe a component of centralised obesity. A first canonical correlation was substantial in both boys and girls (0.84) and was independent of age. It appeared to relate to fatness level. A second canonical correlation was low (0.34 in boys, 0.35 in girls) (p less than 0.01). It too was age independent and in both sexes it reflected differences between fat on the trunk and on the lower extremity, and was thus a component of centralised fat distribution. The simple waist/thigh ratio correlated better with this canonical variable (0.67-0.88) than the more commonly used waist/hip ratio (0.45-0.79). The 'best' index of centralised fat in children is therefore, the waist/thigh circumference ratio, the same one that has been suggested for adults. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |