Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2020)

Body Composition in Individuals with Obesity According to Age and Sex: A Cross-Sectional Study

  • Laurent Maïmoun,
  • Thibault Mura,
  • Antoine Avignon,
  • Denis Mariano-Goulart,
  • Ariane Sultan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9041188
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 1188

Abstract

Read online

Obesity is characterized by an alteration in body composition (BC); however, it is not known whether this alteration is modified by aging or sex. The aims of this study were to analyze BC in individuals with obesity based on age and sex and to determine the prevalence of sarcopenia. Seven hundred and fifty-five obese individuals were subdivided into four age groups. The hole (WB) and segmental BC were determined using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). In men, the WB lean tissue mass (LTM) and fat mass (FM) adjusted by weight and height were relatively constant with age. In women, the WBLTM was higher and WBFM was lower in the >65 group compared to the 18–34 group. A decrease in the LTM and FM at lower limbs and an increase in the trunk were observed, particularly in women, inducing a lower appendicular lean mass index (ALMI; appendicular LTM/height2) in the >65 group compared to the 18–34 group in both sexes. This study demonstrated that even though the WBLTM and FM are relatively constant with age, individuals with obesity present a localized redistribution of these two components. This body composition change leads to a decrease of the ALMI with age, one of the criteria included in the sarcopenia definition.

Keywords