AIM: To provide neck circumference (NC) percentiles and mean values for Turkish children and to investigate their significance in clinical and epidemiological use. METHODS: Data were obtained from a cross-sectional screening study; DAMTCA II (Determination of Anthropometric Measurements in Turkish Children and Adolescents) in which 5481 subjects from 17 primary, secondary and high schools were included. NC percentiles were produced using the LMS method, and NC was compared with other parameters which define body fat distribution. RESULTS: The smoothed NC curves of 3rd, 5th, 15th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 85th, 90th, 95th and 97th percentiles were constructed by age and gender. The descriptive characteristics of collected data were presented as mean (SD: standard deviation) and median (Min-Max: minimum-maximum) to provide detailed information other than smoothed values. The most prominent finding of this study was that the NC of boys was greater, but not significantly higher, than that of girls until the age of 12 but later a prominent increase in the NC of boys is observed compared with girls. We compared obese and non-obese children in the 6-10, 11-13, 14-18 age groups, NC was found to be an important parameter to define obesity. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides NC percentiles, means and medians values and analyses their significance in obesity evaluation in clinical practice.
AIM: To provide neck circumference (NC) percentiles and mean values for Turkish children and to investigate their significance in clinical and epidemiological use. METHODS: Data were obtained from a cross-sectional screening study; DAMTCA II (Determination of Anthropometric Measurements in Turkish Children and Adolescents) in which 5481 subjects from 17 primary, secondary and high schools were included. NC percentiles were produced using the LMS method, and NC was compared with other parameters which define body fat distribution. RESULTS: The smoothed NC curves of 3rd, 5th, 15th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 85th, 90th, 95th and 97th percentiles were constructed by age and gender. The descriptive characteristics of collected data were presented as mean (SD: standard deviation) and median (Min-Max: minimum-maximum) to provide detailed information other than smoothed values. The most prominent finding of this study was that the NC of boys was greater, but not significantly higher, than that of girls until the age of 12 but later a prominent increase in the NC of boys is observed compared with girls. We compared obese and non-obesechildren in the 6-10, 11-13, 14-18 age groups, NC was found to be an important parameter to define obesity. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides NC percentiles, means and medians values and analyses their significance in obesity evaluation in clinical practice.
Authors: P Nagy; E Kovacs; L A Moreno; T Veidebaum; M Tornaritis; Y Kourides; A Siani; F Lauria; I Sioen; M Claessens; S Mårild; L Lissner; K Bammann; T Intemann; C Buck; I Pigeot; W Ahrens; D Molnár Journal: Int J Obes (Lond) Date: 2014-09 Impact factor: 5.095
Authors: Nayera E Hassan; Abeer Atef; Sahar A El-Masry; Amany Ibrahim; Mones M Abu Shady; Muhammad Al-Tohamy; Iman H Kamel; Galal Ismail Ahmed Elashry Journal: Open Access Maced J Med Sci Date: 2015-11-25
Authors: Evelyn Valencia-Sosa; Clío Chávez-Palencia; Juan R Vallarta-Robledo; Enrique Romero-Velarde; Alfredo Larrosa-Haro; Edgar Manuel Vásquez-Garibay; César Octavio Ramos-García Journal: Children (Basel) Date: 2021-05-18