Measurement of short-term changes in the fat content of the body: a comparison of three methods in patients receiving intravenous nutrition

  • Almond D
  • King R
  • Burkinshaw L
  • et al.
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Abstract

1. Three methods of measuring changes in body fat were compared in seventeen patients undergoing a 2-week course of intravenous nutrition. Patients received all nutrition intraveneously at a steady rate of infusion, calculated to supply energy at a rate equal to 1.5 times the resting metabolic expenditure measured before feeding. Fat change was estimated from measurements of skinfold thickness, by isotopic methods (neutron-activation analysis and dilution of tritiated water) and by daily analysis of expired gases.2. The mean (with 1 SEM) gain in fat over the 2-week period was 1.14 (0.30) kg for skinfold measurement, 0.53 (0.62) kg for isotopic determination and 1.29 (0.22) kg for expired-gas analysis. There were no significant differences between the mean gains in fat measured by the three methods.3. The results show that expired-gas analysis is the most sensitive technique, measuring change in fat content with an estimated precision of 0.26 kg. The isotopic method is less sensitive, with a precision of 2.38 kg, but provides a detailed description of body composition. In contrast to these highly-specialized techniques, both of which have limited application, the simple technique of measurement of skinfolds occupies an intermediate position of sensitivity, with a precision for measuring change in fat content of 0.85 kg, and also has the potential to measure total body fat content.

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Almond, D. J., King, R. F. G. J., Burkinshaw, L., Oxby, C. B., & McMahon, M. J. (1984). Measurement of short-term changes in the fat content of the body: a comparison of three methods in patients receiving intravenous nutrition. British Journal of Nutrition, 52(2), 215–225. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19840090

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