Waist percentiles: a simple test for atherogenic disease?
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Paediatrica
- Vol. 85 (11) , 1368-1369
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1651-2227.1996.tb13928.x
Abstract
To give standards for quantification of the magnitude of waist circumference in children. We calculated the percentiles of waist circumference by age and sex from a sample of 2858 subjects (1440 males and 1418 females, aged 6-14 years). Data were from a population survey of 15,000 school-children in Pescara, a town in Abruzzo, a region of Central Italy. We reported the values of the calculated percentiles by age and sex and gave the smoothed percentile curves. Some recent studies in adults have indicated that measuring waist circumference seems to be the simplest way to estimate obesity and the risk of cardiovascular disease. In children, similar evidence is emerging. To date, no example of calculating standards has been published for quantitating the magnitude of waist circumference in children; therefore, our example of standard waist measurements could be used as a practical model for selecting subjects with a value of < or = or > 2 SD from the mean. The metabolic status should then be checked by complementary laboratory examination.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Distribution of BMI in children: prevalence of wasting and fattening conditionsAnnals of Human Biology, 1996
- Waist circumference action levels in the identification of cardiovascular risk factors: prevalence study in a random sampleBMJ, 1995
- Waist circumference as a measure for indicating need for weight managementBMJ, 1995
- Abnormal liver growth in utero and death from coronary heart diseaseBMJ, 1995
- Influence of age, sex, and BMI on waist-to-thigh circumference ratio in childrenAnnals of Human Biology, 1995
- Waist measurement correlates to a potentially atherogenic lipoprotein profile in obese 12–14–year‐old childrenActa Paediatrica, 1994