at the end of this presentation students will be able to: define anthropometry identify the uses...
TRANSCRIPT
At the end of this presentation students will be able to:
Define Anthropometry
Identify the uses of anthropometric tests
List six anthropometric measurements
At the end of this presentation students will be able to:
Identify instruments used in anthropometry
Describe limitations of anthropometry
Refers to the measurement of the body
The science of measuring the human body as to height, weight, and size of component parts, including skinfold thickness, to study and compare the relative proportions under normal and abnormal conditions
(Retrieved from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/anthropometry)
Identify a person’s health risk, and ideal state› total body fat› intra-abdominal fat
Monitor changes in body composition› with disease› growth› development› age and maturation
Assess effectiveness of nutrition/exercise interventions› Applicable to the client’s physiological
status
Assists the Formulation of recommendations and prescriptions for both diet and exercise
Skinfolds (triceps, biceps, subscapular, suprailiac)
Skinfold thickness facilitates indirect measure of thickness of subcutaneous adipose tissue .
Calculated as weight in kg divided by height in meters squared (kg/ m2).
After calculating BMI nutritionists or nurses can use WHO guidelines to categorize weight
Classification BMI(kg/m2)
Principal cut-off points
Additional cut-off points
Underweight <18.50 <18.50
Severe thinness <16.00 <16.00
Moderate thinness 16.00 - 16.99 16.00 - 16.99
Mild thinness 17.00 - 18.49 17.00 - 18.49
Normal range 18.50 - 24.9918.50 - 22.99
23.00 - 24.99
Overweight ≥25.00 ≥25.00
Pre-obese 25.00 - 29.9925.00 - 27.49
27.50 - 29.99
Obese ≥30.00 ≥30.00
Obese class I 30.00 - 34.9930.00 - 32.49
32.50 - 34.99
Obese class II 35.00 - 39.9935.00 - 37.49
37.50 - 39.99
Obese class III ≥40.00 ≥40.00Source: Adapted from WHO, 1995, WHO, 2000 and WHO 2004.
Several factors influence the accuracy of this method: - › technician skill, › weight status, › disease status, › fluid status,› faulty/unstandardised equipment or
measurement protocols.
Skinfold Measurements - easy, inexpensive, accuracy can be problematic
Height-Weight Tables - easy, inexpensive, does not indicate amount of fat; inaccurate in very muscular people
Body Mass Index - easy, inexpensive, does not indicate amount of fat; inaccurate in very muscular people
Girth Measurements - easy, inexpensive
The results of anthropometric measurements may be flawed because of:-› Reproducibility- the ability of a tool to
produce the same result under similar circumstances
› To overcome challenges with reproducibility- tools may be calibrated.
Step 1. BMI Score 0= > 20 1= 18.5 -20.0 2=< 18.5Step 2. Unplanned weight loss score 0=<5% 1= 5-10% 2=>10%
Step 3. Acute disease score: 2 = none or negligible intake for >5
days
Step 4. Add the scores to calculate overall risk of malnutrition0 = low risk: routine clinical care1 = medium risk: observe2 or more= high risk: treat
If wt or ht cannot be established, use documented or recalled values.
If none of the values can be obtained: Use clinical impression (very thin, thin,
obese) and mid-upper arm circumference <23.5 cm (>32 cm = obese)
Wt change: clothes, jewelry loose-fitting =wt loss, or too tight=wt gain
History of decreased food intake, loss of appetite or dysphagia over 3-6 months
Underlying disease or psychosocial/physical disabilities likely to cause wt change
Acute disease with negligible intake
Anthropometry. (n.d.). In The Free Dictionary. Retrieved from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/anthropometry
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. (2011).Centre for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved from http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/video/nhanes3_anthropometry/weight/weight.htm
BMI categories. (2005). World Health Organization. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/bmi/index.jsp?introPage=intro_3.html
Nelson, M., Beresford, S., Kearney, J. (2004). Nutritional Epidemiology. In M. Gibney, B. Margetts, J. Kearney, & L. Arab. Public Health Nutrition. (pp. 27-65). Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Company