Comparison of measured sleeping metabolic rate and predicted basal metabolic rate during the first year of life : evidence of a bias changing with increasing metabolic rate


Autoria(s): Reichman, C. A.; Shepherd, R. W.; Trocki, O.; Cleghorn, Geoffrey J.; Davies, P. S. W.
Data(s)

2002

Resumo

Objective: To compare measurements of sleeping metabolic rate (SMR) in infancy with predicted basal metabolic rate (BMR) estimated by the equations of Schofield. Methods: Some 104 serial measurements of SMR by indirect calorimetry were performed in 43 healthy infants at 1.5, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months of age. Predicted BMR was calculated using the weight only (BMR-wo) and weight and height (BMR-wh) equations of Schofield for 0-3-y-olds. Measured SMR values were compared with both predictive values by means of the Bland-Altman statistical test. Results: The mean measured SMR was 1.48 MJ/day. The mean predicted BMR values were 1.66 and 1.47 MJ/day for the weight only and weight and height equations, respectively. The Bland-Altman analysis showed that BMR-wo equation on average overestimated SMR by 0.18 MJ/day (11%) and the BMR-wh equation underestimated SMR by 0.01 MJ/day (1%). However the 95% limits of agreement were wide: -0.64 to + 0.28 MJ/day (28%) for the former equation and -0.39 to + 0.41 MJ/day (27%) for the latter equation. Moreover there was a significant correlation between the mean of the measured and predicted metabolic rate and the difference between them. Conclusions: The wide variation seen in the difference between measured and predicted metabolic rate and the bias probably with age indicates there is a need to measure actual metabolic rate for individual clinical care in this age group.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/89507/

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Relação

DOI:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601372

Reichman, C. A., Shepherd, R. W., Trocki, O., Cleghorn, Geoffrey J., & Davies, P. S. W. (2002) Comparison of measured sleeping metabolic rate and predicted basal metabolic rate during the first year of life : evidence of a bias changing with increasing metabolic rate. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 56(7), pp. 650-655.

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Basal metabolism #Body height #Body weight #Indirect calorimetry #Infant #Metabolic rate #age #article #basal metabolic rate #calculation #calorimetry #comparative study #controlled study #female #health care #human #human experiment #infancy #male #measurement #normal human #prediction #sleep #statistical analysis #Age Factors #Aging #Body Constitution #Calorimetry #Indirect #Energy Metabolism #Humans #Predictive Value of Tests
Tipo

Journal Article