Clarys J P, Provyn S, Marfell-Jones M J
Experimental Anatomy, Faculty of Physical Education and Physiotherapy, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Laarbeeklaan 103, B-Brussels, Belgium.
Ergonomics. 2005;48(11-14):1445-61. doi: 10.1080/00140130500101486.
The skinfold thickness is a much-used measurement for monitoring adiposity in a wide range of medical, health, occupational and sport science disciplines. Misconceptions abound, however, in its use, particularly that of purportedly predicting body 'fat' as opposed to 'adipose tissue'. To obtain data to investigate body composition and the extent to which anthropometry can be justifiably used to predict whole-body adiposity, an extensive dissection study was undertaken on 34 cadavers. In addition, to pre-empt questions on the applicability of cadaver data to living subjects, 40 elderly in vivo subjects of the same age range were compared with the cadaver population. No significant macro-morphological differences were found between males or females in the morbid and in vivo groups. Significant findings affect our previous understanding of the predictability of whole-body 'fat'. Skinfold compressibility was by no means constant; skin thickness varied with location in both sexes, females having thinner skin than males; there were significant sex differences in adipose tissue patterning. An identical thickness of adipose tissue did not necessarily contain the same concentrations of fat. Despite this variability, a relationship was demonstrated between aggregate skinfold measures and subcutaneous adipose tissue mass (as opposed to subcutaneous fat), this relationship being more evident in men. A strong relationship was found between subcutaneous adiposity and whole-body adiposity, and between direct skinfold depth measures and whole-body adiposity. The amount of visceral adipose tissue was the same in men and women, but in the men this represented a greater proportion of their total body adiposity. Further, the use of waist-to-hip girth ratio (WHR) was identified as an important predictor of health risk. These findings demonstrate that it is not sustainable to introduce a non-quantifiable error by transforming anthropometric values (skinfolds) into predictions of percentage body fat. If subcutaneous adiposity can be predicted, then an excellent indication of overall adiposity could be obtained. Currently, skinfold measurement can yield a reasonable indication of comparative subcutaneous adiposity (better in men than in women). In neither gender is this prediction completely reliable due to both inter- and intra-individual differences in the skinfold measurement procedure.
皮褶厚度是医学、健康、职业和运动科学等众多学科中广泛用于监测肥胖程度的一项测量指标。然而,在其应用方面存在诸多误解,尤其是将其用于预测身体“脂肪”(与“脂肪组织”相对)。为获取数据以研究身体成分以及人体测量法在多大程度上可合理用于预测全身肥胖程度,对34具尸体进行了一项广泛的解剖研究。此外,为预先排除关于尸体数据对活体适用性的疑问,将40名同一年龄段的老年活体受试者与尸体群体进行了比较。在病态组和活体组中,男性或女性之间未发现明显的宏观形态差异。重要发现影响了我们之前对全身“脂肪”可预测性的理解。皮褶的可压缩性绝非恒定不变;皮肤厚度在两性中均因部位而异,女性的皮肤比男性更薄;脂肪组织分布存在显著的性别差异。相同厚度的脂肪组织不一定含有相同浓度的脂肪。尽管存在这种变异性,但总体皮褶测量值与皮下脂肪组织质量(而非皮下脂肪)之间仍显示出一种关系,这种关系在男性中更为明显。皮下肥胖与全身肥胖之间以及直接皮褶深度测量值与全身肥胖之间发现了很强的关系。男性和女性的内脏脂肪组织量相同,但在男性中,这占其全身肥胖的比例更大。此外,腰臀围比(WHR)的使用被确定为健康风险的重要预测指标。这些发现表明,将人体测量值(皮褶)转化为身体脂肪百分比的预测会引入不可量化的误差,这是不可行的。如果能够预测皮下肥胖,那么就可以很好地指示总体肥胖程度。目前,皮褶测量可以合理地指示相对皮下肥胖程度(男性比女性更好)。由于皮褶测量过程中存在个体间和个体内差异,这种预测在两性中都不完全可靠。