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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 80, No. 1, 64-69, July 2004
© 2004 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION

Comparison of methods to assess change in children’s body composition1,2,3

Jane Elberg, Jennifer R McDuffie, Nancy G Sebring, Christine Salaita, Margaret Keil, Delphine Robotham, James C Reynolds and Jack A Yanovski

1 From the Unit on Growth and Obesity, Developmental Endocrinology Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (JE, JRM, MK, DR, and JAY), and the Nutrition Department (NGS and CS) and the Department of Nuclear Medicine (JCR), Warren Magnuson Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Bethesda, MD.

Background: Little is known about how simpler and more available methods to measure change in body fatness compare with criterion methods such as dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in children.

Objective: Our objective was to determine the ability of air-displacement plethysmography (ADP) and formulas based on triceps skinfold thickness (TSF) and bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) to estimate changes in body fat over time in children.

Design: Eighty-six nonoverweight and overweight boys (n = 34) and girls (n = 52) with an average age of 11.0 ± 2.4 y underwent ADP, TSF measurement, BIA, and DXA to estimate body fatness at baseline and 1 ± 0.3 y later. Recent equations were used to estimate percentage body fat by TSF measurement (Dezenberg equation) and by BIA (Suprasongsin and Lewy equations). Percentage body fat estimates by ADP, TSF measurement, and BIA were compared with those by DXA.

Results: All methods were highly correlated with DXA (P < 0.001). No mean bias for estimates of percentage body fat change was found for ADP (Siri equation) compared with DXA for all subjects examined together, and agreement between body fat estimation by ADP and DXA did not vary with race or sex. Magnitude bias was present for ADP relative to DXA (P < 0.01). Estimates of change in percentage body fat were systematically overestimated by BIA equations (1.37 ± 6.98%; P < 0.001). TSF accounted for only 13% of the variance in percentage body fat change.

Conclusion: Compared with DXA, there appears to be no noninvasive and simple method to measure changes in children’s percentage body fat accurately and precisely, but ADP performed better than did TSF or BIA. ADP could prove useful for measuring changes in adiposity in children.

Key Words: Air-displacement plethysmography • bioelectrical impedance • skinfold thickness • dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry • DXA • adiposity • body fat mass • change • growth • children




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