An investigation of anthropometric measurements of early adolescents and determination of BMI-for-age-based neck circumference and BMI-for-age-based mid-upper-arm circumference cut-off points

Author(s):  
Yeliz Mercan ◽  
Gokce Cakmak Kafadar ◽  
Sunbul Hulya Arikan ◽  
Nuket Pancar
1998 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 318-320
Author(s):  
Haifa Tawfeek ◽  
Shalan A. Al-Mashikhi ◽  
Amer Salom

This study is part of a national nutrition survey conducted in Iraq during 1992 and 1993. Anthropometric measurements were obtained in 3,616 children under five years of age. Of those children, 24% were diagnosed as moderately undernourished and 6% as severely undernourished by mid-upper-arm circumference measurements. According to weight-for-height, only 11% were diagnosed as moderately undernourished and 3% as severely undernourished. The discrepancy between the results of these two measurements can be minimized by establishing a new cut-off level for mid-upper-arm circumference for defining malnutrition in our population.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1726-1726
Author(s):  
Esther Polen ◽  
Michael Weintraub ◽  
Chanie Stoffer ◽  
Dena Jaffe ◽  
Ayala Burger ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Studies on pediatric norms to be used for upper extremity post thrombotic syndrome (PTS) assessment have been conducted in North America, but these norms have never been evaluated in non-North American children. A validation study to assess the validity and reliability of the two currently available pediatric PTS assessment instruments, i.e. the Modified Villalta Score (MVS) and the Manco-Johnson Instrument (MJI), on a non-North American convenience sample of healthy children is necessary in order to account for differences that may exist across cultural boundaries. Aim To determine pediatric norms for upper extremity PTS assessment in a non-North American cohort and to determine normal discrepancies in arm circumference, which in American children have been found to be ≤1 cm in the MJI (1) and <3% in the MVS (2). In addition we aimed to evaluate the specificity of the upper extremity PTS assessment instruments by testing the hypothesis that healthy children receive a score of 0 (indicating absence of PTS) when using the pediatric PTS tools. Methods The study design was a community-based observational cross-sectional study using a cohort of 28 healthy children with no history of thrombosis, central venous catheter use and/or family history of thrombosis. Inter-rater reliability of the measurement instruments was assessed using two trained PTS examiners. Results Among the 28 healthy children, the median age was 6.6 years (range 1.5-12.8 years). The median (interquartile range, (IQR)) contra-lateral difference for mid-forearm circumference was 0.4 cm (0.3 cm); and for the mid-upper arm circumference was 0.3 cm (0.5 cm). The upper limit of normal for contra-lateral differences in upper limb circumference was 0.8 cm for mid-forearm and 1.0 cm for mid-upper arm. None of the children had greater than a 1 cm difference in mid-forearm or mid-upper arm circumference. Differences of greater than 3% were present in 4 children (14.3%) in the mid-upper arm circumference. In a simple linear regression model, the absolute difference in upper-arm circumference was positively associated with age (= -0.006 + 0.38 * age; R2=0.18, p=0.025). Agreement between two trained examiners for the healthy child cohort varied depending on the criteria used for determination of normal differences. Using a 1.0 cm cut-off for determination of normal differences resulted in 96% agreement between two trained examiners for both mid-upper arm and mid-forearm measurements. Use of a 3% difference as the cut-off resulted in a 93% agreement between the two examiners. There was 100% agreement for the remaining items of the PTS score. In addition to differences in arm circumference, three healthy children had signs and symptoms associated with PTS; one child (3.6%) presented with bilateral venous collaterals on the chest and shoulders and two children (7.1%) reported pain in the upper extremities, although the pain did not interfere with functioning. Conclusions In a sample of Israeli children, the use of an absolute cut-off measure for contra-lateral differences in upper limb circumference of >1.0 cm is a more applicable and reliable measurement than a 3% cut-off. The presence of signs and symptoms of PTS in the upper extremity of healthy children questions the specificity of the current available PTS assessment tools for upper extremity in children. 1. Goldenberg NA, Pounder E, Knapp-Clevenger R, Manco-Johnson MJ. Validation of Upper Extremity Post-Thrombotic Syndrome Outcome Measurement in Children. J Pediatr. 2010 Nov; 157(5):852–5. 2. Boulden BM, Crary SE, Buchanan GR, Journeycake JM. Determination of pediatric norms for assessment of upper venous system post-thrombotic syndrome. J Thromb Haemost. 2007 May; 5(5): 1077–9. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 2098
Author(s):  
Jyothi S. D. ◽  
Raghavendra Doddamani

Background: Birth weight acts as a crucial sensitive and reliable tool to prevent infant and child morbidity and mortality. There has been a considerable interest in recent years for using simple anthropometric measures as an alternative to birth weight. Objective of the study is to determine the cut off values of the anthropometric measurements and to assess the accuracy of the anthropometric surrogates to identify low birth weight babiesMethods: This is a cross sectional study conducted for a period of one year from 1st Dec 2011 to 31st Nov 2012 at Christian fellowship hospital, Oddanchatram, Dindigal, Tamilnadu. Study population included all the live newborns of term gestation at the hospital. A total of 500 newborns were included in the study during the period. Birth weight of the newborn was measured using spring scale to the nearest 25 grams. Head circumference, Chest circumference, Mid Upper Arm Circumference, Foot Length, Thigh circumference, Calf circumference, Crown-hell length were measured using proper guidelines to the nearest 0.1 cm.Results: In the present study, low birth weight was present in 262 (52.4%) of the newborns. Thigh circumference with cut off value of 15 cm had higher sensitivity and specificity of 97.5% and 80.9% respectively. It was followed by Mid upper arm circumference with cut off value of 10 cm, sensitivity of 81.5% and specificity of 93.9%. Thigh circumference and mid upper arm circumference had high area under curve of 0.949 and 0.855 respectively. All the anthropometric measurements were statistically significant at 5% level of significance.Conclusions: Thigh circumference with a cut off of 15 cm, followed by mid upper arm circumference of 10 cm were the better surrogate anthropometric measurements with better sensitivity, specificity to identify low birth weight babies.


1994 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 164-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
V C Rodrigues ◽  
R S Phaneendra Rao ◽  
A Lena

Anthropometric measurements of 567 healthy non-pregnant women aged 20–40 years were studied to assess the utility of mid-upper-arm-circumference as a screening test to detect malnutrition. The prevalence of malnutrition in the study sample was 38.4%. A cut-off point of 24 cm was found to be most appropriate in the study setting as at that level the sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive values were 71.1%, 69.6% and 59.4%, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giridhara R. Babu ◽  
Aritra Das ◽  
Eunice Lobo ◽  
Deepa R. ◽  
Daisy A. John ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Estimating fat deposition in public hospitals using gold-standard measurements such as high-resolution imaging is unaffordable and it is challenging to use skinfold thickness. We aimed to identify the appropriate substitute marker for skinfold thickness to estimate fat deposition in pregnant women and infants.Methods: The study is part of a prospective cohort study titled, MAASTHI in Bengaluru, from 2016-19. Anthropometric measurements such as body weight, head circumference, mid upper arm circumference (MUAC), and skinfold thickness were measured in pregnant women between 14 to 36 weeks of gestational age; while measurements such as birth weight, head, chest, waist, hip, mid upper arm circumference, and skinfold thickness were recorded for newborns. We calculated Kappa statistics to assess agreement between these anthropometric markers with skinfold thickness. Results: We found the highest amount of agreement between total skinfold thickness and MUAC (Kappa statistic, 0.42; 95% CI 0.38-0.46) in pregnant women. For newborns, the highest agreement with total skinfold thickness was with birth weight (0.57; 95% CI 0.52-0.60). Our results indicate that MUAC higher than 29.2 cm can serve as a suitable alternative to total skinfolds-based assessments for obesity screening in pregnancy in public facilities. Similarly, a birth weight cut-off of 3.45 kg can be considered for classifying obesity among the newborns. Conclusions: Mid upper arm circumference and birth weight can be used as markers of skinfold thickness, reflecting fat deposition in pregnant women and the infant, respectively. These two anthropometric measurements could substitute for skinfold thickness in low- and middle-income urban India settings.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Aparna Roy ◽  
T. V. Sekher

Abstract Use of body mass index (BMI) to assess the nutritional status of adolescents requires many resources, especially for country-level assessment. This study aimed to determine the relationship between BMI and mid upper arm circumference (MUAC) among adolescent males and females in India and to examine whether MUAC effectively represents the nutritional status of adolescents. The study utilized anthropometric measurement data collected by India’s National Family Health Survey-4 (2015–16). The weighted sample for analysis included 91,315 female and 14,893 male adolescents. The BMI and MUAC measurements showed a positive correlation in both female and male adolescents. Using BMI-for-age Z-score classifications, 12.7% of the adolescents were undernourished. Using MUAC (in cm) as per NACS (Nutrition Assessment, Counselling, and Support) guidelines and Mramba et al. (2017) classified 22.9% and 3.7% of the adolescents as undernourished respectively. Finally, using the MUAC-for-age Z-score classification, 98.4% of adolescents were determined to be normal and 1.7% undernourished. Sensitivity and specificity tests of the MUAC cut-offs, in comparison with BMI cut-offs, showed that all three MUAC cut-off classifications had high specificity (NACS cut-off: 81.3%; Mramba et al. cut-off (cm): 97.7%; Mramba et al. cut-off (Z-score): 99.1%). The NACS cut-off had moderately high sensitivity (52.2%) but the Mramba et al. cut-offs had low sensitivity (13.3% for the centimetre cut-off and 6.6% for the Z-score cut-off). Sensitivity and specificity tests proved the relationship between BMI and MUAC, and that MUAC represents adolescent nutritional status with considerable efficiency. With further research, it may be established that MUAC is a better and promising measure of adolescent nutrition, having the advantage of needing fewer resources for data collection. The MUAC has the potential to offer a simple and low-resource alternative to BMI to assess nutritional status among adolescents in poor countries.


2021 ◽  
Vol 224 (2) ◽  
pp. S43
Author(s):  
Ashley A. Appiagyei ◽  
Bellington Vwalika ◽  
Anne West Honart ◽  
Andrew Kumwenda ◽  
Chileshe Mabula ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Franli ◽  
Makmur Sitepu ◽  
Hotma Partogi Pasaribu ◽  
Sake Juli Martina

Introduction. Chronic energy deficieny (CED) is a condition of a body characterized by low body weight and low energy stores, possibly limited physical capacity due to deprivation of food over a long period time. Ministry of Health ( Kemenkes) showed that in 2015, 305 out of 100.000 death of pregnant women is realated to malnutriotion and CED. Objective. The aim of this study is to determine the overview of pregnant women nutritional status based on mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) in Sundari Medan General Hospital. Method. The study was an observational descriptive study with a cross sectional design. The samples of this study consists of pregnant women from Sundari Medan Genaral Hospital, who had fulilled the inclusion and esclusion criteria by total sampling. Results.. Among 60 samples, the prevalance of Non-CED woman (85%) was found higher than the mild malnutrition (15%). Conclusion. Prevalance of CED pregnant women was found higher in risky age, middle educated and high income family.  


Author(s):  
Suci Fitri Rahayu ◽  
Esme Anggeriyane ◽  
Mariani Mariani

The importance of paying attention to nutritional status in early childhood is useful for maximizing the growth phase of early childhood. One way to assess nutritional status for early childhood can be assessed by means of anthropometric measurements. Anthropometric measurements are measurements of various dimensions and body compositions of various ages, such as baby length, head circumference, height, weight, chest circumference, and upper arm circumference. TK Aisyiyah 15 Bustanul Athfal Banjarmasin is one of the schools that has not implemented early detection of the growth and development of pre-school children because the teachers do not understand how to examine and document the results of the examination. Efforts to strengthen the Stimulation, Detection and Early Development Development Program (SDIDTK). Methods ranging from FGDs, training and mentoring so that teachers acquire comprehensive skills in anthropometric examinations. The activity was carried out in August and was continued with mentoring for teachers to be able to monitor and evaluate activities. The results of activities in efforts to strengthen stimulation, detection and early intervention programs for growth and development produce skills for teachers in conducting anthropometric examinations and screening children's growth and development. Efforts to strengthen the program of stimulation, detection and early intervention for growth and development can increase teachers' knowledge in conducting anthropometric examinations and growth screening.


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