Filtern
Volltext vorhanden
- nein (133) (entfernen)
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (115)
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (6)
- Sonstiges (6)
- Ausgabe (Heft) zu einer Zeitschrift (3)
- Rezension (2)
- Habilitation (1)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- ja (133)
Schlagworte
- body height (7)
- nutrition (7)
- stunting (5)
- community effect on height (4)
- height (4)
- school children (4)
- secular trend (4)
- strategic growth adjustments (4)
- Overweight (3)
- SEPE (3)
- child growth (3)
- children (3)
- competitive growth (3)
- skeletal robustness (3)
- BMI (2)
- Body height (2)
- Body mass index (2)
- Body size (2)
- Locally structured standard deviation (2)
- Menarche (2)
- Obesity (2)
- Standard deviation (2)
- Strategic growth adjustment (2)
- Summer Schools (2)
- Variance (2)
- adolescent growth (2)
- anthropometry (2)
- birth weight (2)
- body composition (2)
- body proportions (2)
- education (2)
- elbow breadth (2)
- handgrip strength (2)
- malnutrition (2)
- migration (2)
- physical activity (2)
- pubertal timing (2)
- secular changes (2)
- socioeconomic status (2)
- socioeconomy (2)
- statistical tools (2)
- strategic growth adjustment (2)
- undernutrition (2)
- (SEPE) factors (1)
- APP (1)
- Adolescence (1)
- Adolescent growth (1)
- Adult height (1)
- Anthropometric measurement (1)
- Argentina (1)
- Bandung District (1)
- Body mass index reference values (1)
- Body perception (1)
- Body shape (1)
- Brain development (1)
- Child growth (1)
- Community effect (1)
- Community effect in height (1)
- Community effects on growth (1)
- Competitive growth (1)
- Competitive growth strategies (1)
- Developmental plasticity (1)
- Developmental tempo (1)
- Elbow breadth (1)
- FTO (1)
- Fat Patterning (1)
- Germany (1)
- Growth (1)
- Growth adjustment (1)
- Growth faltering (1)
- Growth hormone (1)
- Growth modelling (1)
- Growth reference values (1)
- Height z-score (1)
- Historic literature (1)
- Human face (1)
- Humans (1)
- Indonesian National Growth Reference Charts (1)
- Just so stories (1)
- Labour market outcome (1)
- Life history (1)
- Locally (1)
- Locally structured correlation (1)
- MABC-2 (1)
- Malnutrition (1)
- Old-age pension (1)
- POLS (1)
- Peer group (1)
- Pelvic breadth (1)
- Physiology (1)
- Poverty (1)
- Refeeding (1)
- Repetition (1)
- Risk taking (1)
- Russian empire (1)
- SEPE Factors (1)
- SEPS factors (1)
- Secular trend (1)
- Social environment (1)
- Social group (1)
- Social network (1)
- Social-Economic-Political-Emotional (SEPE) factors (1)
- St. Nicolas House Analysis (1)
- Statistical Exercise (1)
- Stunting (1)
- Undernutrition (1)
- Voice break (1)
- World Health Organization Child Growth Standards (1)
- adipose tissue (1)
- adolescence (1)
- aerobic sports activity (1)
- anthropometric field studies (1)
- augmented reality (1)
- bilateral asymmetry (1)
- biological age (1)
- body fat estimator (1)
- body mass (1)
- bone accumulation (1)
- breastfed infant development (1)
- breastfeeding (1)
- catch-up growth (1)
- catch-up-growth (1)
- changepoint analysis (1)
- changepoint detection (1)
- child development (1)
- childhood (1)
- children and adolescents (1)
- chronic undernutrition (1)
- conscripts (1)
- contergan (1)
- correlation (1)
- cultural dependence (1)
- daily home-made measurements (1)
- dental eruption (1)
- developmental plasticity (1)
- developmental tempo (1)
- digital laser range finder (1)
- dominance (1)
- early life trauma (1)
- economy (1)
- elderly (1)
- emotional stress (1)
- environmental and general living conditions (1)
- environmental effects (1)
- evolution (1)
- face proportions (1)
- fear (1)
- final body height (1)
- final height (1)
- food access (1)
- frame index (1)
- fundamental motor skills (1)
- genetics (1)
- geographic neighborhood (1)
- gestational weight gain (1)
- growth (1)
- growth of migrants (1)
- growth tempo (1)
- guideline (1)
- handedness (1)
- health (1)
- height in history (1)
- height of Turkish migrants (1)
- hidden obesity (1)
- historical growth (1)
- hormone-releasing hormone (1)
- human growth (1)
- iPhone (1)
- impact on growth (1)
- individual body height (1)
- industrial and developing countries (1)
- kindergarten children (1)
- knemometry (1)
- laterality (1)
- lean mass (1)
- left handers (1)
- life history (1)
- limb disproportions (1)
- linear growth (1)
- low and middle-income (1)
- lower leg length (1)
- maternal trauma (1)
- maturation (1)
- measuring instrument (1)
- menopause (1)
- migrants (1)
- mini growth spurt (1)
- mini growth spurts (1)
- mortality bias (1)
- multipara (1)
- no threshold for stunting (1)
- normal weigh obese (1)
- normal weight obesity (1)
- nutritional components (1)
- obesity (1)
- ontogenesis (1)
- opening strength (1)
- pace of life (1)
- parental age (1)
- parental education (1)
- parental educational status (1)
- parity (1)
- percentage of fat mass (1)
- performance (1)
- performance evaluation (1)
- physical fitness (1)
- physical time (1)
- plasticity (1)
- pre-school children (1)
- prevention (1)
- primipara (1)
- principal component analysis (1)
- professional and amateur athletes (1)
- psychological factors (1)
- psychosocial factors (1)
- public health (1)
- quantile regression (1)
- questioning solutions (1)
- regulation (1)
- regulation of growth (1)
- repetition (1)
- reskilling (1)
- risk of overweight (1)
- screening (1)
- self-perception (1)
- senescence (1)
- short term growth (1)
- short-term growth (1)
- skeletal age (1)
- skeletal breadth measurement (1)
- skeletal robusticity (1)
- skinfolds (1)
- social class (1)
- social classification (1)
- social factors (1)
- social growth adjustment (1)
- social identification (1)
- social network (1)
- social signal (1)
- social signals (1)
- social status (1)
- social-economic-political-emotional (1)
- socio-economic environment (1)
- standing long jump (1)
- structured correlation (1)
- thalidomide embryopathy (1)
- torque (1)
- translation (1)
- type of body shape (1)
- upper extremity (1)
- weight (1)
- westernization (1)
Institut
- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (133) (entfernen)
Benefit of regular Exercise on Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Motor Development in Early Childhood
(2004)
The aim of the study is the analysis of body composition, motor development and cardiovascular parameters of preschool-children. In 2001/2002 a longitudinal study started in 17 nursery schools in Berlin. A total of 160 children out of the 264 children participated in a regular exercise programme. After 24 months of training significant differences of body composition, motor skills and cardiovascular parameters between 5 complete year old children of the intervention and the control group were observed. The results show that such an exercise programme is successful as a preventive measure to decrease the risk of obesity.
Exceeding weight gain in childhood is a prevailing issue in industrialised countries, such as in Germany. The aim of this study was to detect a critical age for exceeding weight gain. It is assumed that especially in the early years of life, the years of nursery school age, the individual development of weight is fundamental for the prediction of obesity. The data of 638 children (324 boys and 314 girls) and the data of additional 1390 children of a preceding longitudinal study were analysed. The results show that overweight newborns are not at higher risk of becoming overweight children later, in the first place. But the results identify a high risk of becoming overweight for children 4.5 years old through a BMI rebound. In addition, this comparably earlier BMI rebound is linked with an increasing percentage of body fat. This leads to the assumption, that a comparably early BMI rebound is remarkably atypical for healthy child development. The results are also interrelated with the test person's sex. Endangered girls are of pyknomorphic body type. In contrast, the boys' results are independent of the body type. Obesity of boys therefore is strongly assumed to be caused by environmental factors.
Growth and body height have always been topics interesting to the public. In particular, the stupendous increase of some 15-19 cm in final adult height during the last 150 years in most European countries (the "secular trend"), the concomitant changes in body and head proportions, the tendency towards early onset of sexual maturation, the changes in the age when final height is being reached, and the very recent trend in body mass index, have generated much scientific literature. The marked plasticity of growth in height and weight over time causes problems. Child growth references differ between nations, they tend to quickly become out of date, and raise a number of questions regarding fitting methods, effects caused by selective drop-out, etc. New findings contradict common beliefs about the primary importance of nutritional and health related factors for secular changes in growth. There appears to be a broad age span from mid-childhood to early adolescence that is characterised by a peculiar insusceptibility. Environmental factors that are known to influence growth during this age span appear to have only little or no impact on final height. Major re- arrangements in height occur at an age when puberty has almost been completed and final height has almost been reached, implying that factors, which drive the secular trend in height, are limited to early childhood and late adolescence.
The aim of this methodological anthropometric study was to compare direct anthropometry and digital two- dimensional photogrammetry in 18 male and 27 female subjects, aged 24 to 65 years, from Potsdam, Germany. In view of the rising interest in reliable biometric kephalofacial data, we focussed on head and face measurements. Out of 34 classic facial anatomical landmarks, 27 landmarks were investigated both by direct anthropometry and 2D-photogrammetry; 7 landmarks could not be localized by 2D-photogrammetry. Twenty-six kephalofacial distances were analysed both by direct anthropometry and digital 2D-photogrammetry. Kephalofacial distances are on average 7.6% shorter when obtained by direct anthropometry. The difference between the two techniques is particularly evident in total head height (vertex-gnathion) due to the fact that vertex is usually covered by hair and escapes from photogrammetry. Also the distances photographic sellion-gnathion (1.3 cm, i. e. 11.6%) and nasal-gnathion (1.2 cm, i. e. 9.4%) differ by more than one centimetre. Differences below 0.5 cm between the two techniques were found when measuring mucosa-lip-height (2.2%), gonia (3.0%), glabella-stomion (3.9%), and nose height (glabella-subnasal) (4.0%). Only the estimates of forehead width were significantly narrower when obtained by 2D-photogrammetry (-1.4 cm, -13.1%). The methodological differences increased with increasing magnitude of the kephalometric distance. Apart from these limitations, both techniques are similarly valid and may replace each other.
Ample literature describes the history of the association between the advances in the health and wealth of people, and mortality rates, life expectancy and adult height. Twentynine German studies with n > 200 subjects published since 1848 on menarcheal age, were reanalyzed, and 101 studies from various other European and non-European countries. On average, mean age at menarche declined since the mid-19(th) century. Historic urban samples tended to decline earlier than rural groups, upper class women earlier than working class women. In Germany, minimum values for the age at menarche were seen already between the two World Wars (Leipzig 12.6 years in 1934, Halle 13.3 years in 1939). Values for mean age and SD for age at menarche were strongly associated. With improving historic circumstances, the two parameters declined in parallel. The standard deviation for menarcheal age dropped from over 2.5 years in mid-19th century France to little more or even less than 1 year in most modern countries. In the German studies the correlation between menarcheal age and SD was almost complete with r = 0.96 (y = 0.35x - 3.53). Similar associations between mean age at menarche and SD for age were found in other European countries. The obvious and immediate effects of historic events on menarcheal age, and particularly on the age distribution, indicate that menarche is a sensitive indicator of public health and wealth, and may be an appropriate estimator for the socio-economic background of historic populations.
Recent progress in modelling individual growth has been achieved by combining the principal component analysis and the maximum likelihood principle. This combination models growth even in incomplete sets of data and in data obtained at irregular intervals. We re-analysed late 18th century longitudinal growth of German boys from the boarding school Carlsschule in Stuttgart. The boys aged 6-23 years, were measured at irregular 3-12 monthly intervals during the period 1771-1793. At the age of 18 years, mean height was 1652 mm, but height variation was large. The shortest boy reached 1474 mm, the tallest 1826 mm. Measured height closely paralleled modelled height, with mean difference of 4 mm, SD 7 mm. Seasonal height variation was found. Low growth rates occurred in spring and high growth rates in summer and autumn. The present study demonstrates that combining the principal component analysis and the maximum likelihood principle enables growth modelling in historic height data also.
The variability of bone strength and skeletal robustness of young men - how it can be influenced
(2011)
Association between skeletal robustness and physical activity in schoolchildren - First results
(2011)
The purpose of this paper is to display the static strength capacities of healthy adults in different age categories. A total of 279 healthy German adults at the ages of 20 to 29 years, 50 to 59 years and 60 to 69 years generated their maximum static handgrip, index finger and thumb push strength, as well as their maximum opening strength on a smooth jar lid of 85 mm diameter and on a knurled bottle lid of 31 mm with their right hand. The results show larger male strength than female strength. Significant age-induced differences appear primarily in opening strengths between the age groups 20 to 29 and 50 to 59 years in male subjects and in female opening strengths between the age groups 20 to 29 and 60 to 69 years as well as between the age groups 50 to 59 and 60 to 69 years. Of greatest interest is that elderly men show the largest opening strengths.
Overweight as a global problem is a challenge to the health systems today and in the future. Detailed information about the development of body composition in children can help to design preventive measures to stop this trend. In the present study 1397 German children aged 6-12 complete years were investigated with anthropometric methods (i.e. height, weight, BMI, skeleton robustness, and percentage of body fat) in 2008/09. The results were compared with a 10 years old identical study. Today, the investigated children are a little bit smaller and the range of BMI and percentage of body fat is increasing. The large decrease of the skeletal robustness especially in the 10(th) and 3(rd) percentile is important. Decrease of physical activity as the most important reason for shrinking skeletal robustness is discussed.