Skinfold Measures.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Exercise Physiology McArdle, Katch, & Katch – Ch. 16
Advertisements

Body Composition. Body Composition Densitometry Measurement of body density by underwater weighing Density= body mass(kg) Body volume(l) %body fat.
Body Composition. 2 component model Fat tissue Fat free tissue.
L Exercise Training and Body Composition Training.
Body Composition.
Body Composition Chapter 4.. Body Composition The relative proportion of fat and fat-free tissue in the body Body composition is not determined by body.
Body Composition. Body Composition Densitometry The difference in weight in a person in air and after submerging in water can be used to work out volume.
Body Composition. We All Change in Many Ways Genetics and Body Composition.
Chapter 6 Lecture © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Body Composition.
Dixie L. Thompson chapter 6 Body Composition. Important Terms Fat mass Fat-free mass Percent body fat Obesity Overweight Body fat distribution or fat.
The association between blood pressure, body composition and birth weight of rural South African children: Ellisras longitudinal study Makinta MJ 1, Monyeki.
ENERGY BALANCE.  BMR is predicted by lean body mass (i.e. total body mass - fat mass), and varies with gender and age.  Extra metabolic energy is consumed.
Luiz Da Silva, Ph.D. Chief Technology Officer IntelaMetrix, Inc An introduction to Ultrasound and the BodyMetrix System.
BODY COMPOSITION Chapter 4. Objectives Define body composition and understand its relationship to assessment of recommended body weight. Explain the difference.
Click the mouse button or press the space bar to display information. Goals/Objectives 1.Discuss ways to determine desirable weight and body composition.
Luiz Da Silva, Ph.D. Chief Technology Officer IntelaMetrix, Inc An introduction to Ultrasound and the BodyMetrix System.
Lab 2 Body Composition Assessment from Underwater Weighing.
© McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Evaluating Body Composition.
5th Component of Health- Related Fitness
1 Anthropometry Spring 2014 BPK 303. Anthropometric Measures Fall Spring 2008.
Fahey/Insel/Roth, Fit & Well: Core Concepts and Labs in Physical Fitness and Wellness, Chapter 6 © 2007 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All Body Composition.
© 2010 Cengage-Wadsworth Chapter 4 Body Composition Outline: 1.Essential & Storage Fat 2.Techniques to Assess Body Composition 3.Determining Recommended.
Body Composition Hydrostatic Weighing. What is Body Composition? Body composition makes reference to a number of things including –Total amount of lean.
Body Composition Techniques 2
Re-cap BMI WHR Definitions Mass: the body’s total weight. Body composition: The relative percentage of muscle, fat, bone, and other tissues that comprise.
Body Composition Continued BMI, BIA, and Skinfolds.
 Definition: describes the percentages of fat, bone, muscle, and fluid that make up body weight.  Because muscular tissue takes up less space in our.
Sport Books Publisher1 Body Composition. Sport Books Publisher2 Body Composition There are three interrelated aspects of the human physique: Size (volume,
Used to describe the amount of fat, bone, muscle and water in our bodies Because muscular tissue takes up less space in our bodies than fatty tissue,
Understanding Body Composition
Body Composition Techniques
Energy Intake and Expenditure L3. Energy Intake  The amount of calories consumed per day  Measured in:  Calories (Kcal) – The amount of energy required.
CHAPTER 8 ENERGY BALANCE AND BODY COMPOSITION. ENERGY BALANCE Excess energy is stored as fat Fat is used for energy between meals Energy balance: energy.
الجامعة السورية الخاصة كلية الطب البشري قسم طب المجتمع
NS 210 Unit 6 Seminar Anthropometrics. Anthropometry Definition – The measurement of body size, weight and proportions – Adherence to technique is critical.
DEFINITION: Describes the percentages of fat, bone, muscle, and fluid that make up body weight Factors that affect a person’s body composition: Heredity.
We All Change in Many Ways What Is Body Composition? Body composition = the body’s relative amounts of fat mass and fat-free mass (bone, water, muscle,
Illinois State University Anthropometry Chapter 5.
Fahey/Insel/Roth, Fit & Well: Core Concepts and Labs in Physical Fitness and Wellness, Chapter 6 © 2007 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Illinois State University Introduction to Body Composition Chapter 1.
Chapter 6 Lecture © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Body Composition.
Illinois State University Body Composition: Children and Maturation Chapters 8 and 9.
Body Composition. What is body composition? The ratio of lean body mass to body fat Generally this is a topic many physical educators try to avoid Although.
Chapter 6 Body Composition. What Is Body Composition? Body composition = the body’s relative amounts of fat mass and fat-free mass (bone, water, muscle,
Obesity.
Body Composition. What Is Body Composition? Body composition is the body’s relative amounts of fat mass and fat-free mass Body fat includes two categories:
Body Composition and Weight. Body Composition Body Composition: The ratio of fat to muscle, bone and other tissues of your body. –  Fat stores =  Body.
© 2010 Cengage-Wadsworth 1234 Key Terms Overweight: An excess amount of weight against a given standard such as height or recommended percent body fat.
Body Composition Calipers & BIA. What Is Body Composition ? Body composition is the term used to describe the different components that, when taken together,
DEFINITION: Describes the percentages of fat, bone, muscle, and fluid that make up body weight Factors that affect a person’s body composition: Heredity.
Body Composition Techniques. DIRECT ASSESSMENT The only direct methods for body composition assessment are dissection or chemical analysis Brussels Cadavre.
Body Composition. Objectives Define body composition and explain its relationship to body weight. Calculate your BMI and classify yourself as underweight,
NS 215 Unit 6 Seminar Anthropometrics. Week 6 is HERE!! How was your week?
Validation of Methods of Estimating % Body Fat. How do you validate these techniques? There can be no direct validation – Measure subjects with technique.
by The Nutrition Society.
PGND 1st SEMESTER APPLIED NUTRITION-I
Objectives Define body composition.
Body composition and Practical Nutritional Assessment
Body Composition.
4 Body Composition.
Body Composition.
Chapter 7: Improving Body Composition
Validation of Methods of Estimating % Body Fat
Body Composition and Weight
Patterns and trends in adult obesity
Validation of Methods of Estimating % Body Fat
Exercise Lab Techniques
Body Composition Ideal body weight = age-related height/weight chart
Validation of Methods of Estimating % Body Fat
Body Composition © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc..
Presentation transcript:

Skinfold Measures

Skinfold Measures Skinfold thickness provides a good measure of subcutaneous fat. Because there is a relationship between subcutaneous fat and total fat, the sum of several skinfold measures can be used to estimate total body fat.

Skinfold Measures Skinfolds include skin and SAT, the latter consisting of adipocytes that contain triglycerides and connective tissue that includes blood vessels and nerves.

Skinfold Measures The thickness of a double layer of skin is about 1.8 mm, but this varies among individuals and systematically by site and with age.

Skinfold Measures Variations in skin thickness among individuals affect the validity of skinfold thickness as measures of subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT).

Skinfold Measures The paucity of SAT in the lean can make it difficult to elevate a fold, and it is not easy to elevate folds with parallel sides in those with large amounts of SAT.

Skinfold Measures Skinfold thicknesses are less precise than circumferences in overweight individuals than in general populations, but skinfolds are less affected by edema than circumferences because caliper pressure reduces the fluid content of SAT.

Skinfold Measures Skinfold thicknesses are affected by individual and regional differences in compressibility that vary with age, gender, and recent weight loss.

Skinfold Measures When a skinfold thickness is measured, the pressure exerted by the calipers displaces some extracellular fluid.

Skinfold Measures In addition, pressure from skinfold calipers may force some adipose tissue lobules to slide into areas of lesser pressure; this sliding may be more marked for thick skinfolds in which the adipose tissue contains little connective tissue.

Skinfold Measures Factors to be considered in the selection of skinfold sites for screening, or for possible inclusion in predictive equations, include accessibility in relation to undressing, precision, the availability of reference data, and the thickness of the fold, which is important in overweight subjects.

Skinfold Measures It may be impossible to measure skinfold thickness at some sites in overweight subjects because the thickness may exceed the maximum jaw openings of the calipers.

Skinfold Measures As an alternative, measurements can be made at sites where there is little SAT (e.g., biceps), or ultrasound can be used to measure SAT thickness, but there are few reference data for unusual sites or for ultrasound values and few predictive equations based on them.

Skinfold Measures Skinfold thicknesses have low correlations with FFM (about 0.2), but they are highly correlated with % BF (r = 0.7 to 0.9) and these correlations do not differ markedly among the common sites.

Skinfold Measures Despite the relatively high correlation between skinfold thicknesses at single sites and % BF, no one skinfold thickness is an accurate predictor of % BF.

Skinfold Measures This reflects individual variation in the distribution of SAT and in the proportion of the total adipose tissue that is subcutaneous.

Skinfold Measures There are gender- and age-differences in the relationships of skinfold thicknesses to % BF. Only three or four skinfold thicknesses are needed in predictive equations.

Skinfold Measures In children, skinfold thicknesses are better predictors of body density than are circumferences.

Skinfold Measures The use of skinfold thicknesses to predict % BF from densiometry is based on implicit assumptions that: measurements of skinfold thicknesses at a few sites provide an adequate description of SAT there is a fixed relationship between SAT and DAT.

Skinfold Measures The first assumption appears correct since there are generally high correlations between skinfold thicknesses at different sites, but there are age and gender differences in the relationships between SAT and DAT.

Skinfold Measures Specific predictive equations are needed for children and adolescents because the distribution of adipose tissue and body composition proportions (e.g., leg length/stature) differs between children and adults.

Skinfold Measures The Jackson and Pollock equation to predict BD for young men was developed from a group that was slightly taller and lighter than U.S. national data.

Skinfold Measures The equation of Jackson et al. to predict body density for young women, which was developed from a group slightly taller and lighter than U.S. national data, had a RMSE of 0.0086 g/cc which was equivalent to 3.9% and a PE equivalent to 3.7%.

Skinfold Measures Skinfold equations derived from young adults commonly underpredict % BF in the middle-aged and elderly, perhaps because of changes with age in the density of FFM and in the relationship between SAT and DAT, including increases in the fat content of muscles.

Skinfold Measures Vu Tran and Weltman reported an equation to predict % BF in middle-aged men. The equation was based on circumferences and had a RMSE of 3.6% and a PE of 4.4% on cross-validation.

Skinfold Measures In the obese, the proportion of total adipose tissue that is subcutaneous may be lower than in general populations and extracellular fluid is increased.

Skinfold Measures Therefore, equations are needed that are specific for the obese. There is evidence that these equations should be based on circumferences rather than skinfold thicknesses.

Skinfold Measures Teran developed an equation to predict % BF calculated from body density using a two-component model in obese women aged 18 to 50 years. The RMSE was 4.2% BF and the PE was 3.9% BF on cross-validation.

Skinfold Measures Equations to predict % BF calculated from body density with a two-component model may be inaccurate in some ethnic groups because of differences from the general population in the density of FFM and in body proportions.

Skinfold Measures Ethnic differences in the distribution of SAT indicate that skinfold equations are likely to perform poorly when applied to ethnic groups other than those from which they are derived.

Skinfold Measures Such considerations have led to the development of equations that are specific for ethnic groups.

Skinfold Measures Summary: predicted values are less accurate than observed (calculated) values a predictive equation should not be applied to a group that is markedly different from the group used to develop the equation.

Skinfold Measures Important group differences may relate to age, gender, ethnicity, and level of body fatness.