Obesity and its associated medical complications represent a major health problem in black women. Evaluating the prevalence and underlying pathogenesis of obesity in black women requires accurate estimates of body fat and the metabolically active tissue mass. At present body weight is subdivided into fat and fat-free fractions through models based on an assumed density, K concentration, or hydration of the fat-free body mass (FFM). Although hydrodensitometry, whole body counting for K, and total body water methods are considered research level techniques, other methods calibrated against them are widely used in clinical practice or in field surveys. The evaluation of human body composition thus relies to a very large extent on the two- compartment models which are based on or validated n relatively few white male cadavers. Until recently , pushing beyond these few cadaver studies in vivo was limited by the unavailability of he required methodology. Major technological advances now, however, provide the opportunity to recalibrate two-compartment methodology and to explore previously unmeasurable body compartments. In the initial phase of our funded study we combined unique resources (hydrodensitometry, dual photon absorptiometry (DPA), radioactive isotopes, neutron inelastic scattering, and delayed and prompt gamma neutron activation) to estimate body density, bone ash, H2O, exchangeable Na, and total body K, Na, Cl, N, P, Ca, and C. By applying these techniques we: 1) developed or markedly improved three-multicompartment body composition models, 2) evaluated four methods of estimating FFM density in vivo, 3) validated the use of DPA in deriving bone mineral, appendicular skeletal muscle, and total body fat, to demonstrate black-white differences in matched (age, weight, height) women for bone mineral, total body K, and FFM density; and 5) observed a relative increase in hydration and lowering of FFM density in obese black women compared to matched lean controls.
The aims of this renewal are to 1) expand our subject pool (n-7) to provide definitive coefficients for two-compartment models in women as a function of age, ethnicity, and body fat; 2) model resting metabolic rate in relation to extensive body composition measurements in this diverse group of subjects; and 3) critically evaluate body composition methodology and models in tracking compartmental changes in obese women losing weight on a hypocaloric diet over three months.

Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1993
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
St. Luke's-Roosevelt Institute for Health Sciences
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10019
Strain, Gladys Witt; Ebel, Faith; Honohan, Jamie et al. (2017) Fat-free mass is not lower 24 months postbariatric surgery than nonoperated matched controls. Surg Obes Relat Dis 13:65-69
Gonzalez, Maria Cristina; Barbosa-Silva, Thiago G; Bielemann, Renata M et al. (2016) Phase angle and its determinants in healthy subjects: influence of body composition. Am J Clin Nutr 103:712-6
Aloia, John F; Shieh, Albert; Mikhail, Mageda et al. (2015) Urinary calcium excretion in postmenopausal African American women. Clin Nephrol 84:130-7
Gao, Yan; Zong, Kuang; Gao, Zackary et al. (2015) Magnetic resonance imaging-measured bone marrow adipose tissue area is inversely related to cortical bone area in children and adolescents aged 5-18 years. J Clin Densitom 18:203-8
Hull, H R; Thornton, J; Paley, C et al. (2015) Maternal obesity influences the relationship between location of neonate fat mass and total fat mass. Pediatr Obes 10:245-51
Reyes-Vidal, Carlos M; Mojahed, Hamed; Shen, Wei et al. (2015) Adipose Tissue Redistribution and Ectopic Lipid Deposition in Active Acromegaly and Effects of Surgical Treatment. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 100:2946-55
Al-Gindan, Yasmin Y; Hankey, Catherine R; Govan, Lindsay et al. (2015) Derivation and validation of simple anthropometric equations to predict adipose tissue mass and total fat mass with MRI as the reference method. Br J Nutr 114:1852-67
Al-Gindan, Yasmin Y; Hankey, Catherine; Govan, Lindsay et al. (2014) Derivation and validation of simple equations to predict total muscle mass from simple anthropometric and demographic data. Am J Clin Nutr 100:1041-51
Davidson, Lance E; Kelley, David E; Heshka, Stanley et al. (2014) Skeletal muscle and organ masses differ in overweight adults with type 2 diabetes. J Appl Physiol (1985) 117:377-82
Shen, Wei; Velasquez, Gilbert; Chen, Jun et al. (2014) Comparison of the relationship between bone marrow adipose tissue and volumetric bone mineral density in children and adults. J Clin Densitom 17:163-9

Showing the most recent 10 out of 206 publications