Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology (Feb 2024)

A More Comfortable Method for Hydrostatic Weighing: Head above Water at Total Lung Capacity

  • Erin White,
  • Silas Bergen,
  • Annabelle Berggren,
  • Lillian Brinkman,
  • Brianna Carman,
  • Lucas Crouse,
  • Emma Hoffmann,
  • Sara Twedt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jfmk9010041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 41

Abstract

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Hydrostatic weighing (HW) requires full submersion with the lungs at residual volume (RV) which is uncomfortable. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to find a more comfortable way to complete HW. A HW system was used to complete three comparisons: comparison 1: change in head position (head above water vs. head below water (HAW vs. HBW)), comparison 2: change in lung volume (total lung capacity (TLC) vs. RV), and comparison 3: change in head and lung volume changes. Participants were separated by males (n = 64) and females (n = 58). Comparison 1: HAW resulted in higher mean percent body fat (PBF) than HBW (4.5% overall, 3.8% in males, 5.4% in females, p p p = 0.003) mean PBF for males but was not significantly lower for females or overall (0.6% higher, p = 0.39, 0.6% lower, p = 0.18, respectively) compared to HBW@RV. In conclusion, keeping the head above water and taking a deep inhale makes HW a more enjoyable, and accessible experience for everyone while still producing accurate PBF results.

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