| Literature DB >> 26642759 |
Michael Hermanussen1, Christiane Scheffler2, Detlef Groth3, Christian Aßmann4.
Abstract
Height and skeletal morphology strongly relate to life style. Parallel to the decrease in physical activity and locomotion, modern people are slimmer in skeletal proportions. In German children and adolescents, elbow breadth and particularly relative pelvic breadth (50th centile of bicristal distance divided by body height) have significantly decreased in recent years. Even more evident than the changes in pelvic morphology are the rapid changes in body height in most modern countries since the end-19th and particularly since the mid-20th century. Modern Japanese mature earlier; the age at take-off (ATO, the age at which the adolescent growth spurt starts) decreases, and they are taller at all ages. Preece-Baines modelling of six national samples of Japanese children and adolescents, surveyed between 1955 and 2000, shows that this gain in height is largely an adolescent trend, whereas height at take-off (HTO) increased by less than 3 cm since 1955; adolescent growth (height gain between ATO and adult age) increased by 6 cm. The effect of globalization on the modern post-war Japanese society ("community effect in height") on adolescent growth is discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26642759 PMCID: PMC4672537 DOI: 10.1186/s40101-015-0080-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol Anthropol ISSN: 1880-6791 Impact factor: 2.867
Fig. 1Relative pelvic breadth (50th centile of bicristal distance divided by body height). The 2005–2012 cohorts were significantly slimmer than the cohorts investigated in 1980–1990 and 1991–2004 [5]
Fig. 2Fiftieth centiles of thorax index (thoracic breadth / thoracic depth). There was no evidence of slimming in the thorax [5]
Fig. 3Body height of Japanese man and women, born since 1870 [17]. The data are reproduced from the original publication with kind permission of the Anthropological Society of Nippon©
Fig. 4Body height in six national Japanese surveys [18, 19]
“Age at take-off (ATO)”, “height at take-off (HTO)”, adult height, and adolescent growth [16] in six national Japanese surveys published between 1955 and 2000 [17, 18]
| ATO | HTO | Adult height | Adolescent growth | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Years | cm | cm | cm | |
| Japan 2000 | 8.1 | 125.39 | 171.05 | 45.66 |
| Japan 1990 | 8.3 | 126.30 | 170.47 | 44.17 |
| Japan 1980 | 8.3 | 125.13 | 169.77 | 44.64 |
| Japan 1970 | 8.7 | 126.03 | 167.53 | 41.50 |
| Japan 1960 | 9.1 | 124.39 | 165.39 | 41.00 |
| Japan 1955 | 9.3 | 122.92 | 162.64 | 39.72 |