Background: Adaptive thermogenesis (AT) is the fat-free mass (FFM)-independent reduction of resting energy expenditure (REE) to caloric restriction (CR). AT attenuates weight loss and favors weight regain. Its variance, dynamics, and control remain obscure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReduction of lean mass is a primary body composition change associated with aging. Because many factors contribute to lean mass reduction, the problem has been given various names depending on the proposed cause, such as "age-related sarcopenia," "dynapenia," "myopenia," "sarcopenic obesity," or simply "sarcopenia." There is currently no consensus on how to best diagnose the reduction of lean mass and its consequences on health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Elite adolescent figure skaters must accommodate both the physical demands of competitive training and the accelerated rate of bone growth that is associated with adolescence, in this sport that emphasizes leanness. Although, these athletes apparently have sufficient osteogenic stimuli to mitigate the effects of possible low energy availability on bone health, the extent or magnitude of bone accrual also varies with training effects, which differ among skater disciplines.
Purpose: We studied differences in total and regional bone mineral density in 36 nationally ranked skaters among 3 skater disciplines: single, pairs, and dancers.
There is a common perception that burned children are at risk for growth deceleration. However, because the prevalence, duration, and degree of this stereotypic growth are poorly described, making informed decisions about treatment is difficult. This article describes the natural history of growth after burn injury, according to the findings of a retrospective review conducted in a regional pediatric burn center.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUseful information about hydration and the size of the body cell mass (BCM) can be obtained by monitoring changes in the amount of total body water (TBW) and its components, extracellular water (ECW) and intracellular water (ICW). A combined tracer dilution method with deuterium to measure TBW and bromide to measure ECW was used to assess changes in ICW (as a proxy for the BCM) and in the ECW/ICW ratio (an indicator of water distribution) over the course of recovery in nine severely burned children. During the acute phase of recovery, ICW losses averaged (mean +/- SD) 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo test the hypothesis that total energy expenditure (TEE) and resting energy expenditure (REE) are low in extremely obese individuals, factors that could contribute to maintenance of excess weight, a cross-sectional study was conducted in 30 weight stable, extremely obese women [BMI (mean +/- SEM) 48.9 +/- 1.7 kg/m(2)].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Little is known about the determinants of individual variability in body weight and fat loss after gastric bypass surgery or about the effects of massive weight loss induced by this surgery on energy requirements.
Objectives: The objectives were to determine changes in energy expenditure and body composition with weight loss induced by gastric bypass surgery and to identify presurgery predictors of weight loss.
Design: Thirty extremely obese women and men with a mean (+/- SD) age of 39.
Background: The ability to measure extracellular water (ECW) in critically ill patients can significantly enhance current methods of assessing fluid homeostasis, body composition, and response to nutritional therapy. We measured corrected bromide space to determine change in ECW with wound closure among acutely burned children.
Methods: Fifteen children with burns over 30% of their total body surface area had their ECW determined following hemodynamic stabilization and when wound closure was complete.
Body composition methods were examined in 20 women [body mass index (BMI) 48.7 +/- 8.8 kg/m(2)] before and after weight loss [-44.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) lose body cell mass (BCM) by unknown mechanisms. Since the loss of BCM in normal aging individuals parallels the characteristic age-related decline in growth hormone (GH) secretion, this study was carried out to determine whether further decreased GH secretion plays a role in the pathogenesis of this loss of BCM in RA patients, termed "rheumatoid cachexia."
Methods: GH secretory kinetics were determined by deconvolution analysis in 16 patients with RA and 17 healthy controls matched for age (mean +/- SD 45.