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State-of-the-art measurements in human body composition: A moving frontier of clinical importance.
Gallagher, D; Shaheen, I; Zafar, K.
Affiliation
  • Gallagher D; Department of Medicine and Institute of Human Nutrition, Columbia University.
Int J Body Compos Res ; 6(4): 141-148, 2008.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21234275
ABSTRACT
The measurement of human body composition allows for the estimation of body tissues, organs, and their distributions in living persons without inflicting harm. From a nutritional perspective, the interest in body composition has increased multi-fold with the global increase in the prevalence of obesity and its complications. The latter has driven in part the need for improved measurement methods with greater sensitivity and precision. There is no single gold standard for body-composition measurements in-vivo. All methods incorporate assumptions that do not apply in all individuals and the more accurate models are derived by using a combination of measurements, thereby reducing the importance of each assumption. This review will discuss why the measurement of body composition or human phenotyping is important; discuss new areas where the measurement of body composition (human phenotyping) is recognized as having important application; and will summarize recent advances made in new methodology. Reference will also be made to areas we cannot yet measure due to the lack of appropriate measurement methodologies, most especially measurements methods that provide information on kinetic states (not just static state) and metabolic function.

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Risk_factors_studies Language: En Journal: Int J Body Compos Res Year: 2008 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Risk_factors_studies Language: En Journal: Int J Body Compos Res Year: 2008 Document type: Article