1. Stability of somatotypes in 4 to 10 year-old rural South African girls.
- Author
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Monyeki, K. D., Toriola, A. L., de Ridder, J. H., Kemper, H. C. G., Steyn, N. P ., Nthangeni, M. E., Twisk, J. W. R., and van Lenthe, F. J.
- Subjects
SOMATOTYPES ,TEENAGE girls ,ANTHROPOMETRY - Abstract
In 1996, a mixed Ellisras longitudinal study (ELS) was initiated to assess the stability of somatotypes in 408 girls who comprised 99 pre-school and 309 primary school children in Ellisras rural area in the Northern Province of South Africa. The children's somatotype was assessed using the Heath-Carter anthropometric method. Anthropometric dimensions were taken according to the protocol of the International Society for the Advancement of Kinanthropometry (ISAK). The most stable pre-school and primary school girl had migratory distances (MDs) of 2.6 and 3.4, respectively, while the least stable pre-school and primary school girl had MDs of 17.9 and 24.4, respectively. The mean somatotype of the pre-school children was mesomorph-ectomorph throughout the complete age range, while the mean somatotype of primary school girls was mesomorph-ectomorph for all the age groups except for the 9.5 years group at which it was in the balanced ectomorph. The inter-age partial correlations for endomorphy and ectomorphy were high and significant, but insignificant with regard to mesomorphy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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