1284 R.C.Siiskamp, N. L. Conen, W. E. Sint, T. W. SARGENT and H. E. WALSH 16. Thigh diameter. At the mid-thigh, the calipers were placed in an anteroposterior position parallel to the floor with the subject standing and relaxed. The caliper arms rested easily on the skin surface with no skin indentation made. The following measurements (17-20) were made with Lange skinfold calipers (Cambridge Scientific Intruments, Cambridge, Maryland) in accordance with the techniques described by the Interdepartmental Committee on Nutrition for National cn Defense [37]. Spring tension of the calipers exert a pressure of 1Og/mm2 over a 40 mm? surface area. The right side was used except for those subjects having a right lower quadrant abdominal scar. In these subjects, the abdominal skinfold was measured on the left side. 17. Arm. With the subject standing, right arm relaxed and flexed 90° at the elbow, the calipers were applied adjacent to the fingers grasping a fold of skin and subcutaneous tissue over the triceps at mid-arm level. 18. Scapula. With the subject standing, a fold of skin and subcutaneous tissue over the inferior angle of the right scapula was grasped so as to parallel a line about 45° from the horizontal level going medially upward. The calipers were applied to the skinfold adjacent to the grasping fingers. 19. Thorax. With the subject supine, breathing quietly and knees raised to relax the abdominal muscles, the skin and subcutaneous tissue over the right 10th rib was grasped parallel to the rib in the anterior axillary line and the calipers applied adjacent to the grasping fingers. 20. Abdomen. With the subject in position as for thorax skinfold measurement, a fold of skin and subcutaneoustissue of the abdomen1 in. to the right of the midline halfway between the umbilicus and the symphysis pubis was prasped so as to parallel the mid-abdominal line. The calipers were applied and the measurementread. Laboratory determinations Laboratory determinations were usually done within two weeks after the anthropometric measurements. Women were studied when non-menstruating. The body weight and height were recorded at the time of the measurements for total body water and body density. If the weight differed by +2 per cent of that obtained in the anthropometric examination, the anthropometric measurements were retaken for subsequent use in calculations. |. Body density determinations by the method of Sir! [21] measure whole body volume in a closed-circuit system which utilizes a gas-dilution principle. With the subject in one chamber and helium in the other, the gases in the two systems are mixed. The helium concentration, measured by thermal conductivity, is related to the volume displacement by the subject. The standard deviation in volume determination is estimated at +0.12 liter. Since the error is little affected by absolute volume, the corresponding error in density ranges from +0.0024 g cm-3 for a 50 kg subject to +0.0012 ¢ cm~3 for a person weighing 100 kg. 2. Total body water was measured after an oral tracer dose of tritiated water, given on the same day as body density was determined. The methods employed involved equipment and proceduresin general use. Four to five timed urine specimens,collected within the first 24-hour period after the dose ingestion, were assayed for tritium with a Tri-Carb liquid scintillation coincidence counter (Packard Instrument Co., LaGrange, Ill.}. The liquid scintillator formulated by WERBIN ef a/. [38] was used. Measures of Body Fat and Related Factors in Normal Adults— I 1285 It was found that 15 ml ofscintillator with 2.0 mi water (the usual sample volume) counted with anefficiency of 17 per cent. Samples were always recounted with an internal standard of tritiated water and appropr iate corrections were made for quenching. Vacuum distillation of urine specimens reduced the volume to an appropriate amount. In general, counting, pipetting, weighing , or other errors were maintained well below | per cent by suitable precautions. 3. Total body fat was calculated for each Subject from the combined measurements of body density and of total body water. The order of magnitude of the error of this calculation, based on the above values for the experimental errors in density and water determinations and for the variability in the combined densities for protein and mineral, has. been found to be +1.7 per cent of the total body weight [25]. For a 70 kg individual the standard deviation in the determination of body fatis therefore +1.2kg This erroris smaller than that expected when body fat is estimated by either density or water measurements since fewer variables are unaccou nted for. In addition total bod water—body density technique for measuring bodyfat is completely independentofthe: state of hydration of the subject. 4. Lean body mass was calculated fromthe body weight less total body fat S. Under the supervision of one of the authors, (T.W.S.) , potassium-40 (K 4) and cesium-137 (Cs!37) were determined using an Argonne type whole-body counter [39] Immediately before the subjects entered the countin g chamber they showered (men also shampooed their hair while women shampooed their hair the night before avoiding the use of hair sprays, rinses, etc.) and put on cotton garments and disposable slippers supplied by the laboratory. These precautions were taken to removeall traces of external activity, such as potassium salts on the skin or scalp, or from fallout occasionally found in dust on hair, skin and clothin g. Whole body counts were performed usually on the same day, and always within one week, of the body density and total body water measurements. The counting geomet ry was that ofthe ‘tiltin chair’ [39]. ° Cs187 activity was determined from the area underth e 0.66 million electron volts (MeV) gamma photopeak of this isotope, from 0.57 to 0.75 MeV. Cs137 counting efficiency was determined in a group of eight volunteers by injection ofcalibrated doses of Cs13" (half-life—6.2 days); the mean counting efficiency was 8.1 counts per minute per nanocutie (nc) with a standard deviation of 0.96 counts/min/ne. Calibration of the counter for K4° was performed by injection of known doses of K4? (half-life=12.5 hr) into nine volunteer subjects. An average counting efficienc of 1.09 +0. 10 counts/min/g with a standard deviation of 9 .7 per cent was determined, The total body potassium for each subject was obtaine d by dividing K4° counts /min by the efficiency factor. This calibration method is strictly empirical, compar ed with the theoretical-empirical calibration obtained by MENEELYet al. [40] The latter method considers the subject’s height and weight and yields values with a lower standard deviation. No such correlation between height and weight and countin g efficiency was foundin the present study, so the efficien cy used here is simply the mean of values for the subjects used for calibration. Diet and physical activity assessment Nutritionists (E.M.H. and M.H.R. during the first part and E.M.H. and N.D.K during the last part of the study) interviewed individually each subject selected for

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