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Waist circumference and waist for height percentiles in urban South Indian children aged 3-16 years.

Authors :
Kuriyan, Rebecca
Thomas, Tinku
Lokesh, Deepa
Sheth, Nishita
Mahendra, Anvesha
Joy, Renju
Sumithra, S.
Bhat, Swarnarekha
Kurpad, Anura
Source :
Indian Pediatrics; Oct2011, Vol. 48 Issue 10, p765-771, 7p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Objectives: To develop age and gender specific waist circumference references for urban Indian children aged 3-16 years. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: Urban preschools and schools of Bangalore. Participants: 9060 children (5172 boys and 3888 girls) in the age group of 3-16 years. Methods: Weight, height, and waist circumference were measured using standard anthropometric methodology. Percentiles for waist circumference and Waist/height ratio (W/Ht) for each age and gender were constructed and smoothed using the LMS method. Results: Mean waist circumference increased with age for both girls and boys. The upper end of curve in boys continued to increase, whereas in the girls it tended to plateau at 14 years. The waist circumference of the Indian children from the present study was higher than age and sex matched European children. The proportion of children with W/Ht ratio greater than 0.5 decreased as their age increased. Conclusions: These curves represent the first waist and waist height ratio percentiles for Indian children and could be used as reference values for urban Indian children. We suggest that for a start, the 75th percentile of waist circumference from this study be used as an 'action point' for Indian children to identify obesity (as a tautological argument), while retaining the cut-off of 0.5 for the W/Ht ratio; however this underlines the need to derive biologically rational cut-offs that would relate to different levels of risk for adult cardiovascular disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00196061
Volume :
48
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Indian Pediatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
66952159
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13312-011-0126-6