AI Article Synopsis

  • Adolphe Quetelet's 1835 work provided a mathematical analysis showing that body weight is approximately proportional to height in adults, a concept that later evolved into what we now call body mass index (BMI).
  • BMI has become a global standard for assessing body fatness at both individual and population levels, evolving through extensive scientific discourse.
  • The rise of effective weight loss treatments has sparked renewed examination of BMI's origins and its appropriateness for diagnosing obesity, emphasizing the importance of understanding its historical and mathematical basis for students and practitioners in health fields.

Article Abstract

A footnote in Adolphe Quetelet's classic 1835 Treatise on Man described his algebraic analysis of how body weight ( ) varies with height ( ) in adult males and females. Using data on 12 short and 12 tall subjects of each sex, Quetelet established the rule that is approximately proportional ( ) to H in adults; that is, when for some constant . Quetelet's Rule ( ), transformed and renamed in the twentieth century to body mass index ( ), is now a globally applied phenotypic descriptor of adiposity at the individual and population level. The journey from footnote to ubiquitous adiposity measure traveled through hundreds of scientific reports and many more lay publications. The recent introduction of highly effective pharmacologic weight loss treatments has heightened scrutiny of BMI's origins and appropriateness as a gateway marker for diagnosing and monitoring people with obesity. This contemporary context prompted the current report that delves into the biological and mathematical paradigms that underlie the simple index . Students and practitioners can improve or gain new insights into their understanding of BMI's historical origins and quantitative underpinning from the provided overview, facilitating informed use of BMI and related indices in research and clinical settings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11611441PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/obr.13842DOI Listing

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