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Trend of Body Compositions with Aging among Chinese Adolescents, Adults and Elders.

Authors :
Xu T
Zhu G
Han S
Source :
The journal of nutrition, health & aging [J Nutr Health Aging] 2015 Dec; Vol. 19 (10), pp. 962-9.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Introduction: Rare reports can be found about sex- and age-specific body composition survey among Chinese population. The aim of this study is to explore the change of sex-specific body compositions with aging among Chinese adolescents, adults and elders.<br />Methods: In a large-scale population survey about physiological constants and health conditions, 75,714 subjects who aged from 8 to 80 completed body composition array. Body mass index (BMI), percentage body fat (PBF), water percentage of body weight (WPBW), water percentage of lean body mass (WPLBM), fat-free mass index (FFMI) and basic metabolic rate were examined with Biodynamics BI-310 body composition analyzer. General obesity is defined as BMI equal to or greater than 28 kg/m2.<br />Results: The prevalence rates of general obesity were 9.4% for males and 7.7% for females respectively. With aging, PBF and FMI showed a U-shape curvilinear trend and WPBW showed a parabolic trend for males. At same age group: 18-19 age groups, PBF and FMI declined to the valley and WPBW rose to the peak. For females, PBF, WPBW and FMI changed in a linear trend. The values of WPLBM and FFMI showed same curvilinear trend for two genders. WPLBM changed in a U-shape trend and touched the valley in twenties for males and in 18-19 age groups for females. The value of FFMI was larger for older age groups in the younger generation but smaller in the older generation. A parabolic trend peaking was seen in the thirties for males and in the forties for females. Regression models with age as independent variable showed that the larger rate of increase of PBF and smaller rates of increase for WPBM and WPLBM with aging for males.<br />Conclusion: This study presents detailed data about sex-specific body composition conditions. Different change trend with aging was found about body composition conditions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1760-4788
Volume :
19
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The journal of nutrition, health & aging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26624206
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12603-015-0526-8