Smruti Y Vispute1,2, Rubina M Mandlik1, Vaman V Khadilkar1,2, Ketan M Gondhalekar1, Anuradha V Khadilkar3,4. 1. Growth and Endocrine Unit, Hirabai Cowasji Jehangir Medical Research Institute, Jehangir Hospital, Pune, Maharashtra, 411001, India. 2. Interdisciplinary School of Health Science, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, Maharashtra, India. 3. Growth and Endocrine Unit, Hirabai Cowasji Jehangir Medical Research Institute, Jehangir Hospital, Pune, Maharashtra, 411001, India. anuradhavkhadilkar@gmail.com. 4. Interdisciplinary School of Health Science, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, Maharashtra, India. anuradhavkhadilkar@gmail.com.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the strength of association of two measures of BFS: frame-size one (FS1; height ÷ wrist circumference) and frame-size two (FS2; elbow breadth), with body-fat indices, body composition, and hypertension in Indian children and adolescents, and to determine age and sex-specific cutoffs of BFS to predict hypertension. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional, multicenter, school-based study in 9- to 18-y-old healthy children (n = 1423) randomly selected from 3 Indian states. Based on tertiles, FS1 and FS2 were categorized as small, medium, and large. RESULTS: Greater BFS (both FS1 and FS2) was associated with higher body-fat indices, BP (r = -0.424 for FS1 and r = 0.282 for FS2, p < 0.01) and lower muscle mass (MM). A significantly greater percentage of children classified as having large BFS according to FS1 were found to be overweight/obese (46% vs. 25%), hypertensive (34% vs. 17%) than FS2 (p < 0.01). FS1 showed strong to very strong association (Cramer's V 0.15 to > 0.25) with body-fat indices, MM, and BP as opposed to FS2 (For BP X2 = 120.9 for FS1 vs. 9.06 for FS2). FS1 better identified obesity and hypertension, and a value of 10.6 was determined to be the optimum cutoff for predicting hypertension in both genders (sensitivity 71%, specificity 75%, AUC 0.795, and NPV 95%). CONCLUSIONS: Height-to-wrist circumference is a novel, simple, and precise BFS measure for predicting hypertension and muscle mass (9-18 y) and a single cutoff value (< 10.6) may contribute to rapid screening and prompt identification of children at risk of hypertension.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the strength of association of two measures of BFS: frame-size one (FS1; height ÷ wrist circumference) and frame-size two (FS2; elbow breadth), with body-fat indices, body composition, and hypertension in Indian children and adolescents, and to determine age and sex-specific cutoffs of BFS to predict hypertension. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional, multicenter, school-based study in 9- to 18-y-old healthy children (n = 1423) randomly selected from 3 Indian states. Based on tertiles, FS1 and FS2 were categorized as small, medium, and large. RESULTS: Greater BFS (both FS1 and FS2) was associated with higher body-fat indices, BP (r = -0.424 for FS1 and r = 0.282 for FS2, p < 0.01) and lower muscle mass (MM). A significantly greater percentage of children classified as having large BFS according to FS1 were found to be overweight/obese (46% vs. 25%), hypertensive (34% vs. 17%) than FS2 (p < 0.01). FS1 showed strong to very strong association (Cramer's V 0.15 to > 0.25) with body-fat indices, MM, and BP as opposed to FS2 (For BP X2 = 120.9 for FS1 vs. 9.06 for FS2). FS1 better identified obesity and hypertension, and a value of 10.6 was determined to be the optimum cutoff for predicting hypertension in both genders (sensitivity 71%, specificity 75%, AUC 0.795, and NPV 95%). CONCLUSIONS: Height-to-wrist circumference is a novel, simple, and precise BFS measure for predicting hypertension and muscle mass (9-18 y) and a single cutoff value (< 10.6) may contribute to rapid screening and prompt identification of children at risk of hypertension.