Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMerryl Hutchinson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Body Composition & Body Image HPE 1000-01 Wellness
2
2Fundamental Concepts 2e Health Risks Associated with Being Overweight Coronary heart disease Hypertension Hypercholesterolemia Diabetes There are also health risks associated with being too thin!
3
3Fundamental Concepts 2e Body Composition (2 compartment model) Fat Lean Body Mass (LBM): (bones, muscles, tissues, organs) 70kg person with 20% body fat: Lean tissue: 70 kg x.80 = 56 kg Fat tissue:70 kg x.20 = 14 kg Sample calculation:
4
Fundamental Concepts 2e4 Regional Fat Deposition (WHR)
5
5Fundamental Concepts 2e Abdominal Body Fat Relationships with CHD Risks Abdominal obesity predicts CHD risk independent of BMI, smoking, cholesterol and hypertension (Kannel et al., J. Clin Epid., 44, 183-190, 1991). Abdominal obesity predicts CHD risk independent of total body fatness. (Larsson et al.,Appetite, 13, 37-44, 1989). Abdominal obesity statistically accounts for the difference in CHD rates between men and women (Larsson et al., Am. J. Epi., 135: 266-273, 1992).
6
6Fundamental Concepts 2e Abdominal Body Fat Relationships with other risk factors Abdominal obesity is strongly influenced by genetics - similar gain among twins (r=.72). (Bouchard, NEJM, 322, 1477-1482, 1990). Abdominal obesity is greater in smokers than non- smokers due to the presence of androgens (Barrett-Conner, Ann. Int. Med. 111, 783-787, 1989). Abdominal body fat is preferentially lost during a physical activity program (Kohrt, J. Gerontology, 47: M99-M105, 1992)
7
7Fundamental Concepts 2e Body Composition Estimation BMI Circumference Measures Skinfolds Bioelectric impedance Underwater Weighing Imaging techniques Imaging techniques (DEXA, MRI)
8
Fundamental Concepts 2e8 BMI’s for Adults
9
9Fundamental Concepts 2e Underwater Weighing Technique Body fat provides more buoyancy so a fatter person weighs less (on a relative basis) than a lean person
10
10Fundamental Concepts 2e Body Composition Assessment Implications of Results Values are estimates (+/- 2-3% at best) Values are personal and confidential Proper uses of results: - Serve as baseline data for repeated testing - Provide motivation for goal setting - Provide awareness about health risks
11
11Fundamental Concepts 2e Calculating Desired Body Weight (Example) Current weight = 200 Current body fat% = 20% Desired body fat% = 15% Desired Weight = 200 - (200 x.20) (1 -.15) Desired Weight = 200 - 40 (.85) = 160.85 = 188
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.