Anthropometry Flashcards

1
Q

Why measure body compositions?

A

To evaluate growth and/or nutritional status of individuals or populations e.g. detection of malnutrition, obesity, or even specific nutrient deficiencies.

To assess the effect of a certain conditions or disease state

To determine the effect of health interventions or look for associations between body composition and other factors

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2
Q

What is the only direct method uses to measure body composition?

A

The only direct method is by chemical analysis of cadavers

Used only as a ‘gold-standard’ to validate a novel indirect method

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3
Q

Explain what a gold standard is

A

A method that has been tested and is the most reliable

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4
Q

What are the levels of body measurments?

A

Atomic - carbon, hydrogen, oxygen

Molecular - protein, lipid, water

Cellular - ECS (Concentration in extracellular solids), ECF (Concentration in extracellular fluids), Cells

Tissue - Blood, Bone, Adipose tissue, Skeletal muscle

Whole body

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5
Q

What is a DAPA model and the components of this model?

A

A class of interface models that use more than one source of measurement data to achieve a more valid estimate of body composition.

2-components - Fat mass (FM) and Fat-free mass (FFM)

3-components - Fat mass (FM), Water, Fat- free dry mass

4-components - Fat mass (FM), Water, Fat-free dry mass

5-components - Fat mass (FM), Water, Proteins, Bone mineral content (BMC), Non-osseous mineral content

6-components - Fat mass (FM), Water, Protein, Bone mineral content (BMC), Non-osseous mineral content, Glycogen

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6
Q

Explain what the following terms are composed of:

Fat mass

Fat-Free mass

A

Fat mass - includes water, protein, glycogen, bone mineral content, and non-osseous mineral content

Fat free mass - includes protein, glycogen, bone mineral content, and non-osseous mineral content

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7
Q

How useful are each of the body composition models?

A

1C - Not very useful for true ‘composition’ assessment, but vey simple and easy to carry out (e.g. BMI)

2C - Very commonly-used, Limited equipment needs, Simple conceptually, But makes lots of assumptions

3C and 4C- Less commonly used, Makes fewer assumptions, More sophisticated equipment, Greater conceptual complexity, Often used for special population where 2C assumptions are not valid

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8
Q

What are some of the challenges to measuring body composition?

A

Anorexic conditions

Osteoporosis

Oedematous conditions

Obesity

Artificial Ventilation

Cancer

Cystic Fibrosis

HIV/AIDS

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9
Q

Explain the term anthropometry

A

Anthropometry is the science that defines physical measures of a person’s size, from, and functional capacities.

Anthropometry literally means human measurements including: weight, height, circumference, limb length, Abdominal sagittal diameter, Skinfold thickness

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10
Q

Explain the method of hydro densitometry (underwater weighing) and give advantages and disadvantages

A

Method:
Measure ‘dry’ weight in air (kg)

Measure ‘wet’ weight (kg) when totally immersed in water

Calculations
Body density (g/ml) = Dry weight (kg) / difference

Example: 70kg / (70kg – 2.03kg) = 1.03 g/ml

Correction for residual volume of air in lungs and GI tract (very buoyant = 0.0012g/ml).

Often just assume an average value = 100ml

Advantages: very precise for normal, healthy population, reliable and accurate, often referred to as a ‘gold standard’ method

Disadvantages: Apparatus needed is substantial and not portable based on sex- and population-specific equations needed for good level of precision

Cannot assess fat distribution

Time and labour intensive

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11
Q

Explain what an air-displacement plethysmography is and give advantages and disadvantages of this method

A

Bodpod: the modern 2-C ‘gold standard’ method

Same principles to underwater weighing - displacement of air rather than water.

Still need to account for residual volume (lungs and GI tract).

Much more commonly used than UWW

Advantages:

Fast assessment time (2-5 mins)

Very accurate in healthy individuals

Minimal training required

Fits in a small room

Disadvantages:

Some people get claustrophobic, expensive to buy, reliant on 2-C assumptions

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12
Q

Explain what BMI is and the difference, advantages and disadvantages to this measurement method

A

BMI is an adult only measure

Women tend to have more body fat than men

Ethnicity/race - black people have less body fat than do white people, Asian people have more body fat than do whites

Older people, on average, tend to have more body fat than younger people

Athletes have less body fat than do non-athletes

Advantages:

Can be used in large-scale population studies

Inexpensive and simple to perform

Low measurement error

Can be used by GPs and clinicians

Useful for issuing public health recommendations

Secular trends (i.e. over time) can be easily observed and acted upon

Disadvantages:

Validity not so good for:

People with lower or greater-than-average muscle mass

Children: although BMI percentile charts are available, they’re much less predictive of BF than in adults

Elderly: changes in body composition with age

Non-European ethnic populations

Disease states and “abnormal” states (e.g. pregnancy and lactation)

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13
Q

Methods to measure weight on a person who cannot stand up

A

Wheelchair scale

Bed scale

Parachute/ lift

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14
Q

Explain what the Wait-Hip circumference is

A

The waist-hip ratio (WHR) is thee dimensionless ratio of the circumference of the waist to that of the hips. This is calculated as waist measurement divided by hip measurement

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15
Q

Explain what tricep skinfold measurements are

A

Sub- cutaneous fat depots around the body are measurements with callipers

Peripheral sites - biceps, triceps, thigh

Central sites = sub-scapular, supra-iliac

Site-specific skinfold measurements are often added up

Subcutaneous fat is related to total fat (more equations)

Age and gender-specific equations

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16
Q

Give advantages and disadvantages of triceps skinfolds

A

Advantages:

Relatively simple-to-use (once properly trained)

Relatively non-invasive

Highly portable (bedside possible)
Inexpensive to buy and operate

Can be used in healthy and sick populations

Disadvantages:

Inter-observer reliability is poor

Training required
Inaccuracies due to assumptions about subcutaneous fat

Population specific equations

17
Q

How are the following measurements carried out:

Biceps skinfold

Triceps skinfold

Subscapular skinfold

Suprailia skinfold

A

Biceps skinfold - front side middle upper arm

Triceps skinfold - back side middle upper arm

Subscapular skinfold - under the lowest point of the shoulder blade

Super iliac skinfold - above the upper bone of the hip

18
Q

Explain what a Bio-electric impedance machine is and give advantages and disadvantages

A

Measures the impedance/opposition to electrical flow

Impedance is low in lean tissue & high in fat

Impedance is proportional to body water volume

Advantages:

Machines are now relatively inexpensive

Machines are portable

Easy to standardise data across different sites

Operator can be trained in use in a few minutes

No need to undress

Results = comparable to DXA in certain populations

Disadvantages:

Prediction equations required and should ideally be population specific

Many machines use default equations, rather than more specific ones

Results can vary between makes and models

Reproducibility is affected by hydration state, fasting state, rapid body composition changes.

19
Q

Explain how a dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) is used and give advantages and disadvantages

A

Body is scanned with x-rays of two different energy levels

Uses software to generate a 2-D picture

Imaging software calculates:

Bone mineral content and density

Lean mass

Fat mass

Vey useful for detection of osteoporosis, but also used extensively for obesity research

Advantages:

Relatively expensive £20,000

Uses assumptions

Disadvantages:

High reproducibility (0.5% variance bone mineral density & 2% total body comp.)

Radiation dose is relatively small

Quick & easy to perform

Subject friendly

20
Q

When does measuring a high of a person not work?

A

If they have scoliosis or kyphosis or are disabled

21
Q

Explain how ulna length is measured

A

Where possible, make measurements on the non-dominant side:

Ask the participant to stand straight facing you.

Ask them to raise their non-dominant arm so that their palm is across their chest, and their fingers are pointing upwards at the opposite shoulder

Using a tape measure, measure the distance between the olecranon (point of the elbow) and the styloid process (the prominent bone of the wrist).

Read the tape to the nearest 0.1 cm.

Record three measurements of ulna length and calculate the mean.

Height can be read from the table on the next page.

22
Q

Explain how demi-span length is measured

A

Where possible, make measurements on the non-dominant side:

Ask the participant to stand straight facing you or sit upright

Demi-span (defined asthe distance between the mid-point of the sternal notch and the finger roots with the arm outstretched laterally)

23
Q

Explain how Knee heigh is measured

A

The patient should bend their left knee and left ankle to a right angle

Hold the tape measure between 3rd and 4th fingers with a zero reading underneath fingers.

Place your hand about 4cm behind the front of the knee

Extend the tape measure straight down the side of the leg in line with the bony prominence at the ankle

Measure to the nearest 0.5cm

24
Q

Explain how recumbent length is measured in infants

A

Infant or those under two years of age,should have height measured whilst they are lying down.

Measurement is from the top of the head to the soles (heels) of the feet.

25
Q

What is a MUAC?

A

Mid-upper arm circumference

26
Q

Explain what Xanthelasma is

A

Xanthelasma are yellow growths on or near the eyelids. They can be flat or slightly raised.

They form whendeposits of cholesterol (lipid or fat) build up under the skin.

Can be a sign of heart disease.

27
Q

What is Glossitis?

A

Inflammation of tongue

28
Q

What is Arcus Senilis

A

White or grey opaque arc shape around eyes

Visible around corneal periphery of the eyes

Associated with normal aging

Irreversible