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Percent Body Fat: Estimation and Interpretation Michelle N. Kuperminc, MD Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrician Naval Medical Center Portsmouth Portsmouth, Virginia This presentation does not represent opinions or views of the US Government
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Percent Body Fat: Estimation and Interpretation• Slaughter et al. Skinfold equations for estimation of body fatness in children and youth. Human Biology, 1984 • Stevenson. Use

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  • Percent Body Fat: Estimation and Interpretation

    Michelle N. Kuperminc, MD Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrician

    Naval Medical Center Portsmouth Portsmouth, Virginia

    This presentation does not represent opinions or views of the US Government

  • Overview

    •  Estimate percent body fat

    – Slaughter method

    – Gurka method

    •  Interpretation of percentages

  • Rationale •  Growth/nutritional status linked to health, participation, life

    expectancy in individuals with CP

    •  Due to differences in body composition, simple anthropometric measures used in other populations not predictive of nutritional status in individuals with CP (weight/height, BMI, arm circumference, single skinfold measurement)

    •  Complex methods of body composition assessment not always feasible in clinical setting (underwater weighing, D2O dilution, DEXA, BIA)

    •  Additive skinfold equations developed to predict percent body fat Stevenson et al, 2006 Kuperminc et al, 2010

    Brooks et al, 2012 Brooks et al, 2014

  • Triceps skinfold

  • Subscapular skinfold

  • Slaughter Equations •  Estimate percent body fat from skinfolds

    •  Prior equations by Lohman et al. not adequate for children (change in body composition over time and pubertal status)

    •  Developed from classic methods used to measure body composition (underwater weighing, D20 dilution method)

    Slaughter et al, 1998

  • Gurka Equations •  Estimate percent body fat from skinfolds

    •  Slaughter equations underestimate percent body fat in children with CP

    •  Specific to individuals with CP

    •  Developed correction factors to Slaughter equations

    •  Based on DEXA

    •  Externally validated in ambulatory population

    •  May overestimate percent body fat in children with higher percent body fat

    Kuperminc et. al, 2010 Gurka et al, 2010 Rieken et al, 2011

  • Gurka Equations

    Two skinfolds: subscapular and triceps

    1.  Slaughter method to calculate percent body

    fat.

    2.  Correct for CP, gender, pubertal status,

    severity of motor impairment (GMFCS 3-5)

  • Example

    •  11 year old prepubertal white male with CP GMFCS 4

    •  TSF=10

    •  SSF=11

  • Percent body fat by Slaughter method

    •  TSF=10, SSSF=11

    •  %BF Slaughter=1.21 (TSF+SSSF)-.008 (TSF+SSSF)2-1.7

    •  %BF Slaughter=1.21 (21) – 0.008 (441) – 1.7

    •  %BF Slaughter= 25.42 – 3.528 - 1.7

    •  % BF Slaughter=23.6%

  • Percent Body Fat by Gurka Method

    •  % BF Gurka =% BF Slaughter (corrected) •  CP +12.2

    •  Male -5

    •  Level of motor impairment +5.1 •  % BF Gurka =23.5 + 12.2 – 5 + 5.1

    •  % BF Gurka = 35.8%

  • Interpretation

    •  Published, population based reference curves are descriptive rather than prescriptive

    •  Published, population based accepted cutoffs (may or may not be relevant

    to children/adolescents with CP) are prescriptive

    –  Based on percentiles (random?)

    –  Based on health indicators (outcomes, metabolic studies)

    •  Emerging health indicators in population of individuals with CP

    –  Overall growth relationship with health and participation (Stevenson et al, 2006)

    –  Body weight relationship with mortality (Brooks et al, 2012)

    –  No published indicators linked to percent body fat in this population

    McCarthy et al, 2006

  • Reference Curve Percentiles for Percent Body Fat: US Boys Ages 5-19 NHANES IV

    Laurson et al, 2011

    Gurka

    Slaughter

  • Recommended cutoffs: UK Boys Ages 5-18

    McCarthy et al, 2006

    Gurka

    Slaughter

  • References •  Brooks et al. Low weight, morbidity, and mortality in children with cerebral palsy: New clinical growth charts.

    Pediatrics, 2011.

    •  Chumlea et al. Prediction of stature from knee height for black and white adults and children with application to mobility-impaired or handicapped persons. Juornal of the American Dietetic Association, 1994.

    •  Gurka et al. Assessment and correction of skinfolld thickness equations in estimating body fat in children with cerebral palsy, Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 2010.

    •  Kuperminc et al. Anthropometric measures: poor predictors for body fat in children with moderate to severe cerebral palsy, Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 2010.

    •  Laurson et al. Body Percentile Curves for US Adolescents and Children, American Journal of Preventative Medicine, 2011.

    •  Oeffinger et al. Accuracy of Skinfold and Bioelectrical Impedance assessments of body fat percentage in

    ambulatory individuals with cerebral palsy. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 2013.

    •  Rieken et al. Measuring body composition and energy expenditure in children with severe neurologic impairment

    and intellectual disability. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2011.

    •  Slaughter et al. Skinfold equations for estimation of body fatness in children and youth. Human Biology, 1984

    •  Stevenson. Use of segmental measures to estimate stature in children with cerebral palsy. Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, 1995.