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Body Composition: Children and Maturation. Chapters 8 and 9. Total Body Composition. Birth to Old Age The human body goes through many changes when aging. Infant. Child. Teens. Young Adults. Middle-aged. Parents. Seniors. Maturation.
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Body Composition: Children and Maturation Chapters 8 and 9
Total Body Composition • Birth to Old Age • The human body goes through many changes when aging
Maturation • During childhood and adolescence, FFB density progressively increases. • As children age, the hydration of the FFB decreases and the mineral content increases.
Maturation • The classic 2-C models systematically overestimate %BF of children and adolescents. • Either the 4-C or 3-C (water) models should be used to obtain reference measures of body composition for children and adolescents.
Maturation • The overall density of the FFB tends to decrease with aging primarily due to the loss of bone mineral and skeletal muscle mass.
Maturation • There is a wide degree of inter-individual variability in the FFB composition of older men and women.
Maturation • The classic 2-C models systematically overestimates the average %BF for groups of older adults.
Newborns • Muscle comprises... • 27% N • 33% K • 28% water • ...of body’s total stores.
Newborn • Has a much smaller muscle mass than the adult, about 25% versus 40% of body weight.
Newborns • At birth, boys and girls do not differ in water, fat, protein, and osseous and non-osseous mineral contents. • In fact, data indicate marked similarity between males and females at one month of age.
Infants • Changes in body components include an 8 to 9% increase in fat mass to a level of 22 to 24% at one year of age and a more than two-fold increase in FFM.
Infants • The most notable change in the constituents of FFM is a large shift of water between the ECF (extracellular fluid) and the ICF (intracellular fluid) compartments, although there is only a slight increase in TBW (1-2%).
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • Childhood - period from infancy (ends at 1 yr) to puberty. • Puberty - state of physical development when sexual reproduction first becomes possible. • Adolescence - includes puberty and continues until sexual maturation is complete.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • Sex differences appear during childhood. • By the age of 5, bone mineral has increased from 3 to 3.6% of FFM in boys, but not in girls. • %BF tends to be lower in boys (14.6%) than in girls (16.7%).
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • There is little or no change in %BF for girls from 10 to 18 years, although total fat mass increases at an annual rate of 1.14 kg per year.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • For boys, %BF decreases annually by 1.15% across the age range.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • The water content of FFM is about 75% and 77% for boys and girls respectively.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • There are gender differences during adolescence in the growth of FFM. • From 10 to 20 yrs, FFM increases by 33 kg in boys, but only 16 kg in girls.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • The increase in FFM continues for a longer period in males than in females; adult levels are reached at 18 yrs in females, but not until about 20 yrs in males.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • The major changes in the composition of FFM from pubescence to adulthood occur in the water and mineral portions.
Childhood, Puberty, and Adolescence • These changes show that a multi-component model is necessary in children and adolescents for the estimation of body composition from body density.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • From 20 to 55 years of age, changes in body composition are slower compared with those during childhood, adolescence, or senescence.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • It has been demonstrated that the average individual in this country will gain approximately one pound of additional weight each year after the age of 25 years.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • Such a seemingly small gain, however, results in 30 pounds of excess weight by the age of 55 years.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • Since the bone and muscle mass decrease by approximately one half pound per year due to reduced physical activity, fat is actually increasing by 1.5 pounds per year.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • This means a 45 pound gain in fat over this 30 year period!
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • BMC increases about 8% per year until adolescence. • After adolescence the rate of increase in BMC is slower in girls than in boys but continues until a peak BMC of 1000 g is attained by women at 30-39 years.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • In women aged 50-99 years, BMC decreases at a rate of 6-7% per decade.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • Males achieve adult mineralization by the age of 20 years with an average BMC of 1307 g, which remains constant from 50-60 years.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • A decrease in BMC in males begins between 60 and 70 years; the rate of decrease is about 10% from 70-85 years.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • For women and men up to 70 yrs. of age, calcium and potassium are lost proportionally.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • In men older than 70 years, the TBCa/TBK ratio is higher, indicating a greater loss of muscle mass than of bone mineral content.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • The non-muscle lean mass, mainly vital organs, does not change with age; total body protein (TBP) decreases 17% between ages 20 and 79 yrs.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • Adults, like children and adolescents, change in body composition, but the changes during adulthood are slower.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • Some of these changes affect the composition of FFM and thereby alter its density.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • There is a lack of research literature concerning assessments of body composition by multiple models among ethnic groups.
Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults • Most of our knowledge of changes in total body composition has been inferred from cross-sectional data, which can show the mean changes but not individual variation.
Assessing Body Composition • The skinfold equations recommended for children include the Lohman equation (7-17yrs) and the Slaughter equation (8-17yrs) • Information on these equations can be found in Table 8.1, p. 113.
Assessing Body Composition • Ethnic specific SKF equations have been developed for American Indian, African American, and Caucasian Children. • Additional cross-validation studies are needed to confirm the accuracy of these equations for estimating %BF
Assessing Body Composition • The Slaughter SKF equations provide a fairly reasonable estimate of average %BF for groups of African American and Caucasian children and adolescents; however, for individuals the prediction error is between + 8-10% BF.
Assessing Body Composition • The Houtkooper BIA equation provides a fairly good estimate of body composition for groups of Caucasian children and adolescents; the error for individuals may be as large as + 11% BF.
Assessing Body Composition • Compared to HW, ADP overestimates the average Db of children.
Assessing Body Composition • DEXA typically underestimates average %BF in older adults. • Preliminary findings suggest that HW and ADP yield similar estimates of Db for groups of older men and women.