Comparison of methods of estimating body fat in normal subjects and cancer patients
Open Access
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 34 (12) , 2839-2847
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/34.12.2839
Abstract
Total body fat can be indirectly estimated by the following noninvasive techniques: determination of lean body mass by measurement of body potassium or body water, and determination of density by underwater weighing or by skinfold measurements. The measurement of total body nitrogen by neutron activation provides another technique for estimating lean body mass and hence body fat. The nitrogen measurement can also be combined with the measurement of total body potassium in a two compartment model of the lean body mass from which another estimate of body fat can be derived. All of the above techniques are subject to various errors and are based on a number of assumptions, some of which are incompletely validated. These techniques were applied to a population of normal subjects and to a group of cancer patients. The advantages and disadvantages of each method are discussed in terms of their ability to estimate total body fat.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- A comparison of methods of assessment of body composition including neutron activation analysis of total body nitrogenMetabolism, 1981
- Compartmental body composition of cancer patients by measurement of total body nitrogen, potassium, and waterMetabolism, 1981
- Fat-free body mass from skinfold thickness: a close relationship with total body nitrogenBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1978
- A comparison of the skinfold method with extent of ‘overweight’ and various weight-height relationships in the assessment of obesityBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1977
- Body fat assessed from total body density and its estimation from skinfold thickness: measurements on 481 men and women aged from 16 to 72 YearsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1974
- A whole-body counter with an invariant response to radionuclide distribution and body sizePhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1969
- The assessment of the amount of fat in the human body from measurements of skinfold thicknessBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1967
- THREE‐COMPONENT BODY COMPOSITION ANALYSIS BASED ON POTASSIUM AND WATER DETERMINATIONS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1963
- LEAN BODY MASSA.M.A. Archives of Internal Medicine, 1953
- THE SPECIFIC GRAVITY OF HEALTHY MENJAMA, 1942