ISSN: 1308-5727 | E-ISSN: 1308-5735
Volume: 16 Issue: 4 Year: 2024
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Abstracting & Indexing
Turkish Society for Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes
Height, Weight and Body Mass Index Percentiles of Children Aged 6-14 Years Living at Moderate Altitudes [J Clin Res Pediatr Endocrinol]
J Clin Res Pediatr Endocrinol. 2012; 4(1): 14-20 | DOI: 10.4274/jcrpe.559

Height, Weight and Body Mass Index Percentiles of Children Aged 6-14 Years Living at Moderate Altitudes

İsmail Malkoç1, Mümtaz M. Mazıcıoğlu2, Behzat Özkan3, Meda Kondolot4, Selim Kurtoğlu4, Hakkı Yeşilyurt5
1Ataturk University Faculty Of Medicine, Department Of Anatomy, Erzurum, Turkey
2Erciyes University Faculty Of Medicine, Department Of Family Medicine, Kayseri, Turkey
3İstanbul Medeniyet University Faculty Of Medicine, Department Of Pediatric Endocrinology, İstanbul, Turkey
4Erciyes University Faculty Of Medicine, Department Of Pediatric Endocrinology, Kayseri, Turkey
5Undersecretary Of Ministry Of Health, Department Of Anatomy, Ankara, Turkey

Objective: Individuals living at high altitudes are reported to have lower stature and also a smaller chest size in relation to their stature. Altitude-related hypobaric hypoxia is considered to be the major cause of these alterations in growth, but adverse socioeconomic and/or other environmental conditions may also have a role in poor growth performance. This study was undertaken to provide growth data on children and adolescents living in a moderate-altitude area in Turkey.
Methods: The dataset of an anthropometric study conducted among a population living in a city at an altitude of 2000 meters was analyzed. A total of 1638 children and adolescents (871 males and 767 females) aged between 6 and 14 years were included in this study. The LMS method was used in the analysis and percentile values corresponding to the 3rd, 5th, 10th, 15th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 85th, 90th, 95th and 97th percentiles for height, weight and body mass index (BMI) were estimated. The results were compared with the measurements of children and adolescents living in areas of lower altitude in Turkey.
Results: Starting at ages 0-10 years, height, weight and BMI values of children and adolescents of both genders living at an altitude of 2000 meters were noticeably lower than those reported for their counterparts living in areas of lower altitude in Turkey.
Conclusions: The higher values for height, weight and BMI in children living in low-altitude areas can be attributed to altitude effect, but socioeconomic and microclimate effects cannot be discarded and further studies are needed.

Keywords: weight,height,body mass index,adolescents,mid altitude,percentiles


Manuscript Language: English
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