| Literature DB >> 21658236 |
Pascal Bovet1, Nathalie Kizirian, George Madeleine, Monika Blössner, Arnaud Chiolero.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Thinness in children and adolescents is largely under studied, a contrast with abundant literature on under-nutrition in infants and on overweight in children and adolescents. The aim of this study is to compare the prevalence of thinness using two recently developed growth references, among children and adolescents living in the Seychelles, an economically rapidly developing country in the African region.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21658236 PMCID: PMC3121668 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2891-10-65
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Anthropometric characteristics of the study population, according to sex and school grade
| N | Age (years) | Weight (kg) | Height (cm) | Overweight including obesity (%)* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindergarten | 3,980 | 5.5 (0.4) | 19.4 (3.5) | 112.8 (5.7) | 15.2 (2.0) | 9.7 (8.8 - 10.6) |
| 4th grade | 4,489 | 9.2 ( 0.4) | 29.5 (7.0) | 133.8 (6.3) | 16.3 (3.0) | 12.4 (11.5 - 13.4) |
| 7th grade | 4,262 | 12.5 (0.4) | 42.2 (11.0) | 151.8 (8.4) | 18.2 (3.7) | 13.2 (12.2 - 14.2) |
| 10th grade | 3,941 | 15.7 (0.4) | 57.7 (11.3) | 169.7 (7.6) | 20.0 (3.3) | 10.0 (9.0 - 10.7) |
| Kindergarten | 3,735 | 5.5 (0.4) | 19.0 (3.3) | 111.9 (5.8) | 15.1 (2.0) | 12.3 (11.2 - 13.3) |
| 4th grade | 4,411 | 9.2 (0.4) | 30.1 (7.8) | 133.8 (6.8) | 16.7 (3.4) | 17.8 (16.6 - 18.8) |
| 7th grade | 4,276 | 12.5 (0.4) | 46.0 (11.5) | 154.0 (7.2) | 19.2 (4.1) | 19.0 (17.8 - 20.2) |
| 10th grade | 4,246 | 15.7 (0.4) | 54.9 (11.9) | 160.2 (6.4) | 21.3 (4.2) | 18.1 (17.0 - 19.3) |
*Overweight and obesity are defined according to the IOTF criteria [9]
Results are expressed as mean (SD) for continuous variables and as percentage (95% confidence interval) for prevalence.
Figure 1Distribution of BMI-for-age in boys and comparison of the IS and WHO cut-offs. The Y axis is truncated at BMI 20 kg/m2.
Figure 2Distribution of BMI-for-age in girls and comparison of the IS and WHO cut-offs. The Y axis is truncated at BMI 20 kg/m2
Prevalence of thinness categories based on the IS cut-offs and the WHO cut-offs
| Categories | Boys (n = 16,672) | Girls (n = 16,668) | Total (n = 33,340) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade 1 | <18.5 kg/m2 * | 22.5 (21.9 - 23.2) | 20.3 (19.7 - 20.9) | 21.4 (21.0 - 21.9) |
| Grade 2 | <17.0 kg/m2 * | 6.2 (5.8 - 6.6) | 6.6 (6.2 - 7.0) | 6.4 (6.2 - 6.7) |
| Grade 3 | <16.0 kg/m2 * | 1.6 (1.4 - 1.8) | 2.3 (2.1 - 2.6) | 2.0 (1.8 - 2.1) |
| <-1 SD | 27.8 (27.1 - 28.5) | 23.7 (23.0 - 24.3) | 25.7 (25.2 - 26.2) | |
| Thinness | <-2 SD | 7.7 (7.3 - 8.1) | 5.7 (5.4 - 6.1) | 6.7 (6.4 - 7.0) |
| Severe thinness | <-3 SD | 1.4 (1.2 - 1.6) | 1.0 (0.9 - 1.2) | 1.2 (1.1 - 1.3) |
IS cut-offs: criteria from an international survey [7]; WHO cut-offs: criteria from the World Health Organization [8]; SD: standard deviation.
Results are expressed as percentage (95% confidence interval).
*at age 18 years
Figure 3Prevalence of grades of thinness according to age and gender according to the IS cut-offs.
Figure 4Prevalence of grades of thinness according to age and gender according to the WHO cut-offs.