Literature DB >> 21524833

Body mass index and weight-for-length ratio references for infants born at 33-42 weeks gestation: a new tool for anthropometric assessment.

Shmuel Davidson1, Dafna Natan, Ilya Novikov, Nir Sokolover, Avi Erlich, Raanan Shamir.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: The risk of childhood obesity, an increasingly prevalent problem worldwide, might be predictable by early body mass index measurements. This study sought to develop body mass index and weight-for-length ratio references for infants born at 33-42 weeks gestation and to validate these data against the growth curves of the World Health Organization Multicenter Growth Reference Study.
METHODS: Data were collected from the Neonatal Registry of Rabin Medical Center for all healthy singleton babies born live at 33-42 weeks gestation. Crude and smoothed reference tables and graphs for body mass index and weight-for-length ratio by gestational age were created for males and females, separately.
RESULTS: Birth weight, length, and body mass index percentiles for full-term neonates were similar to the World Health Organization study, reinforcing the generalizability of our reference charts for infants born at 33-42 weeks. Cutoff values for small for date (<5th, <10th percentile) and large for date (>85th, >95th percentile) infants differed across gestational ages in both pre-term and full-term infants.
CONCLUSIONS: As body proportionality indexes provide an assessment of body mass and fatness relative to length, we suggest that BMI and Wt/L ratio percentiles be added to weight and length growth curves as a routine intrauterine growth assessment at birth.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd and European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21524833     DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2011.03.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0261-5614            Impact factor:   7.324


  1 in total

1.  Weight/length ratio references and newborn body composition estimation at birth from a Brazilian cohort.

Authors:  Carlos Grandi; Livia Dos S Rodrigues; Davi C Aragon; Fabio Carmona; Viviane C Cardoso
Journal:  J Pediatr (Rio J)       Date:  2021-02-10       Impact factor: 2.990

  1 in total

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