PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Anthropometry and body composition of adolescents in cracow, poland.

  • Wiesława Klimek-Piotrowska,
  • Mateusz Koziej,
  • Mateusz K Hołda,
  • Katarzyna Piątek,
  • Karolina Wszołek,
  • Anna Tyszka,
  • Elizabeth Kmiotek,
  • Mateusz Pliczko,
  • Aleksandra Śliwińska,
  • Klaudia Krauss,
  • Marcin Miszczyk,
  • Jerzy Walocha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0122274
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. e0122274

Abstract

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The aim of the present study was to determine the level of adiposity and obesity in Polish adolescents and compare the results with earlier studies conducted in this population as well as those carried out in other populations.The study group consisted of 456 boys and 514 girls aged 14-18 years living in Cracow chosen from randomly selected secondary schools. Weight, height, waist, and hip circumference (WC, HC) as well as triceps, biceps, subscapular, and suprailiac skinfold thickness (SFT) were measured. Body mass index (BMI), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), waist-to-height ratio (WHtR), subscapular/triceps skinfold ratio (STR), and percentage body fat were computed. The prevalence of overweight and obesity based on Polish children growth reference were calculated and age-dependent and gender-specific smoothed percentile curves for BMI and ROC curves were generated.Weight, height, WC, HC (up 16yr), WHtR (up 15yr), and WHR were considerably higher in males than females. Weight, height, and HC increased with age; WHtR remained the same. The prevalence of overweight and obesity were 10.2% (boys 10.3%; girls 10.1%) and 4.2% (boys 5.3%; girls 3.3%). ROC analysis revealed that WHtR was the best tool for detection of obesity (AUC of 0.982±0.007) in males, whereas the sum of four SFTs (AUC: 0.968±0.011) and WHtR (AUC: 0.963±0.012) were the best predictors of obesity in females.The level of adiposity in Cracow adolescents increased during the last decade. However, it is still lower than in other well-developed societies struggling with obesity epidemics.