Title of article :
ESTIMATION OF LEAN BODY WEIGHT IN OLDER WOMEN
WITH HIP FRACTURE
Author/Authors :
S.J. Mitchell1، نويسنده , , 2، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
lean body weight (lBW) decreases with age while total body fat increases, resulting in
altered drug pharmacokinetics. a semi-mechanistic equation estimating lBW using height, weight and sex has
been developed for potential use across a wide range of body compositions. the aim of this study was to
determine the ability of the lBW equation to estimate dual energy x-ray absorptiometry-derived fat free mass
(FFMDXa) in a population of older women with recent hip fracture. Methods: Baseline, four and 12 month data
obtained from 23 women enrolled in the Sarcopenia and hip Fracture study were pooled to give 58
measurements. lBW was estimated using the equation:
Body composition was classified as: ‘normal’ (BMi <25kg/m2 and not sarcopenic), ‘overweight-obese’ (BMi
>25kg/m2 and not sarcopenic), ‘sarcopenic’ (sarcopenic and BMi <25kg/m2), or ‘sarcopenic-obese’ (sarcopenic
and BMi >25kg/m2). the ability of the lBW equation to predict FFMDXa was determined graphically using
Bland-altman plots and quantitatively using the method of Sheiner and Beal. Results: the mean ± SD age of
female participants women was 83±7 years (n=23). Sarcopenia was frequently observed (65.2%). Bland-altman
plots demonstrated an underestimation by the lBW equation compared to FFMDXa. the bias (95% ci) and
precision (95% ci) calculated using the method of Sheiner and Beal was 0.5kg (-0.7, 1.66kg) and 4.4kg (-3.7,
12.4kg) respectively for pooled data. Conclusion: this equation can be used to easily calculate lBW. When
compared to FFMDXa, the lBW equation resulted in a small underestimation on average in this population of
women with recent hip fracture. the degree of bias may not be clinically important although further studies of
larger heterogeneous cohorts are needed to investigate and potentially improve the accuracy of this predictive
equation in larger clinical cohorts.
Keywords :
lean body weight , prediction , ageing , Women , Hip fracture
Journal title :
The journal of nutrition, health & aging
Journal title :
The journal of nutrition, health & aging