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- Title
Body composition trajectories into adolescence according to age at pubertal growth spurt.
- Authors
BUYKEN, ANETTE E.; BOLZENIUS, KATJA; KARAOLIS-DANCKERT, NADINA; GUNTHER, ANKE L. B.; KROKE, ANJA
- Abstract
To investigate whether the development of body composition into adolescence differs among children with an early, average, or late pubertal growth spurt (age at take-off [ATO]). Mixed-effect polynomial models were applied to serial anthropometric measurements spanning from 4 years before to 4 years after ATO in 215 DONALD participants. Sex-specific trajectories of fat mass index (FMI, FM/m), fat-free mass index (FFMI, FFM/m), and their z-scores were compared among those with an early, average, or late ATO. Compared with girls with a late ATO (reference group), those with an early or average ATO experienced a significant increase in FFMI z-scores [β (standard error) for linear trends in early and average ATO group: +0.15 (0.05) FFMI z-scores/year ( P = 0.001) and +0.11 (0.04) FFMI z-scores/year ( P = 0.005), respectively, adjusted for early life factors]. Similar differences were observed in boys [adjusted β (standard error): +0.20 (0.06) FFMI z-scores/year ( P = 0.0004) and +0.07 (0.05) FFMI z-scores/year ( P = 0.1), respectively]. Graphical illustration of the predicted trajectories revealed that differences in relative FFMI emerged from ATO onward. For FMI, comparison with late maturers showed a more pronounced quadratic trend (kg/m/years) ( P = 0.01) among early-maturing girls and a reduced linear trend in FMI z-scores/year ( P = 0.04) among early-maturing boys. This longitudinal study suggests that children who experience an early pubertal growth spurt accrue progressively more fat-free mass during the first years of puberty than late-maturing peers of the same age. Higher levels of adiposity commonly observed in adults with early puberty onset are, thus, likely to develop subsequently in later adolescence. Am. J. Hum. Biol., 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Subjects
HUMAN body composition; ADOLESCENCE; GROWTH of children; CHILDREN &; sex; PUBERTY
- Publication
American Journal of Human Biology, 2011, Vol 23, Issue 2, p216
- ISSN
1042-0533
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ajhb.21125