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Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China

OBJECTIVES: Health care professionals have recommended the use of age-related body mass index (BMI) to evaluate obesity in children. Until now, no age-related reference curves for BMI have been reported in China. Presented here are age-related BMI percentile curves for children aged 0~18 years in Sh...

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Autores principales: Shang, Lei, Xu, Yong-yong, Jiang, Xun, Hou, Ru-lan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Master Publishing Group 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23674955
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author Shang, Lei
Xu, Yong-yong
Jiang, Xun
Hou, Ru-lan
author_facet Shang, Lei
Xu, Yong-yong
Jiang, Xun
Hou, Ru-lan
author_sort Shang, Lei
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Health care professionals have recommended the use of age-related body mass index (BMI) to evaluate obesity in children. Until now, no age-related reference curves for BMI have been reported in China. Presented here are age-related BMI percentile curves for children aged 0~18 years in Shaanxi, China, 1995. METHODS: The Third Nationwide Growth Survey was performed in 1995 and from this survey, data of the Shaanxi population were retrieved to construct the age-related BMI percentile curves. A total of 27,200 healthy children aged 0~18 years were examined for height and weight, using the standardized methods. The λ-median-coefficient of variation (LMS) method was used for curve fitting; all analyses were carried out on the basis of different sexes and areas through a special program for LMS method. RESULTS: Median BMI increased steeply in early life, with a peak at 8 months, then declined, and then leveled off at about 6 years. The age of adiposity rebound for urban children was about two years earlier than that for rural children and one year earlier for boys than for girls. After adiposity rebound, BMI increased more rapidly in girls than in boys, and the increase in urban children was more rapid than that in rural children. As the onset of puberty, female BMI became higher than that of males, and the difference between boys and girls was larger for rural children than for urban children. The 95th, 50th and 5th percentiles for Shaanxi children were lower than those of comparable American children. Cut-off points for obesity was lower than those of international averages, suggesting the nutrition status of Shaanxi children is lower than that of children in developed countries, and has not reached the international average level. CONCLUSIONS: Using the LMS method, we constructed age-related BMI percentile curves for Shaanxi children aged 0~18 years, the first for Chinese children. Percentile curves and cut-off points for obesity can be used as a reference for assessing the nutrition status of Shaanxi children aged 0~18 years. The identified gender and residency differences may serve as guides to an understanding of the cause and prevention of obesity.
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spelling pubmed-36145802013-05-01 Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China Shang, Lei Xu, Yong-yong Jiang, Xun Hou, Ru-lan Int J Biomed Sci Article OBJECTIVES: Health care professionals have recommended the use of age-related body mass index (BMI) to evaluate obesity in children. Until now, no age-related reference curves for BMI have been reported in China. Presented here are age-related BMI percentile curves for children aged 0~18 years in Shaanxi, China, 1995. METHODS: The Third Nationwide Growth Survey was performed in 1995 and from this survey, data of the Shaanxi population were retrieved to construct the age-related BMI percentile curves. A total of 27,200 healthy children aged 0~18 years were examined for height and weight, using the standardized methods. The λ-median-coefficient of variation (LMS) method was used for curve fitting; all analyses were carried out on the basis of different sexes and areas through a special program for LMS method. RESULTS: Median BMI increased steeply in early life, with a peak at 8 months, then declined, and then leveled off at about 6 years. The age of adiposity rebound for urban children was about two years earlier than that for rural children and one year earlier for boys than for girls. After adiposity rebound, BMI increased more rapidly in girls than in boys, and the increase in urban children was more rapid than that in rural children. As the onset of puberty, female BMI became higher than that of males, and the difference between boys and girls was larger for rural children than for urban children. The 95th, 50th and 5th percentiles for Shaanxi children were lower than those of comparable American children. Cut-off points for obesity was lower than those of international averages, suggesting the nutrition status of Shaanxi children is lower than that of children in developed countries, and has not reached the international average level. CONCLUSIONS: Using the LMS method, we constructed age-related BMI percentile curves for Shaanxi children aged 0~18 years, the first for Chinese children. Percentile curves and cut-off points for obesity can be used as a reference for assessing the nutrition status of Shaanxi children aged 0~18 years. The identified gender and residency differences may serve as guides to an understanding of the cause and prevention of obesity. Master Publishing Group 2005-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3614580/ /pubmed/23674955 Text en © Shang et al. Licensee Master Publishing Group http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Shang, Lei
Xu, Yong-yong
Jiang, Xun
Hou, Ru-lan
Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China
title Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China
title_full Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China
title_fullStr Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China
title_full_unstemmed Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China
title_short Body Mass Index Reference Curves for Children Aged 0-18 Years in Shaanxi, China
title_sort body mass index reference curves for children aged 0-18 years in shaanxi, china
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23674955
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