Lee Simon, Bountziouka Vassiliki, Lum Sooky, Stocks Janet, Bonner Rachel, Naik Mitesh, Fothergill Helen, Wells Jonathan C K
Respiratory, Critical Care and Anaesthesia Section, UCL Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom.
Postgraduate medical education, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 5;9(12):e113883. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113883. eCollection 2014.
Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis (BIA) has the potential to be used widely as a method of assessing body fatness and composition, both in clinical and community settings. BIA provides bioelectrical properties, such as whole-body impedance which ideally needs to be calibrated against a gold-standard method in order to provide accurate estimates of fat-free mass. UK studies in older children and adolescents have shown that, when used in multi-ethnic populations, calibration equations need to include ethnic-specific terms, but whether this holds true for younger children remains to be elucidated. The aims of this study were to examine ethnic differences in body size, proportions and composition in children aged 5 to 11 years, and to establish the extent to which such differences could influence BIA calibration.
In a multi-ethnic population of 2171 London primary school-children (47% boys; 34% White, 29% Black African/Caribbean, 25% South Asian, 12% Other) detailed anthropometric measurements were performed and ethnic differences in body size and proportion were assessed. Ethnic differences in fat-free mass, derived by deuterium dilution, were further evaluated in a subsample of the population (n = 698). Multiple linear regression models were used to calibrate BIA against deuterium dilution.
In children < 11 years of age, Black African/Caribbean children were significantly taller, heavier and had larger body size than children of other ethnicities. They also had larger waist and limb girths and relatively longer legs. Despite these differences, ethnic-specific terms did not contribute significantly to the BIA calibration equation (Fat-free mass = 1.12+0.71*(height2/impedance)+0.18*weight).
Although clear ethnic differences in body size, proportions and composition were evident in this population of young children aged 5 to 11 years, an ethnic-specific BIA calibration equation was not required.
生物电阻抗分析(BIA)有潜力在临床和社区环境中广泛用作评估身体脂肪含量和组成的方法。BIA提供生物电特性,如全身阻抗,理想情况下需要根据金标准方法进行校准,以便准确估计去脂体重。英国针对大龄儿童和青少年的研究表明,在多民族人群中使用时,校准方程需要包含特定种族的项,但对于年幼儿童是否如此仍有待阐明。本研究的目的是检查5至11岁儿童在体型、比例和组成方面的种族差异,并确定这些差异在多大程度上会影响BIA校准。
在2171名伦敦小学生的多民族人群中(47%为男孩;34%为白人,29%为非洲/加勒比黑人,25%为南亚人,12%为其他),进行了详细的人体测量,并评估了体型和比例方面的种族差异。通过氘稀释法得出的去脂体重的种族差异,在该人群的一个子样本(n = 698)中进一步进行了评估。使用多元线性回归模型根据氘稀释法对BIA进行校准。
在11岁以下的儿童中,非洲/加勒比黑人儿童比其他种族的儿童明显更高、更重,体型更大。他们的腰围和肢体围度也更大,腿相对更长。尽管存在这些差异,但特定种族的项对BIA校准方程(去脂体重 = 1.12 + 0.71×(身高²/阻抗) + 0.18×体重)没有显著贡献。
尽管在这一5至11岁幼儿群体中,体型、比例和组成方面存在明显的种族差异,但不需要特定种族的BIA校准方程。