Body Water, Lean Body and Fat Mass of Healthy Children as Measured by Deuterium Oxide Dilution

Abstract Body composition of 165 healthy children was measured using the well-established method of deuterium oxide (2H2O) dilution. After distribution of an oral load of 2.0 ml 2H2O/kg body weight body water was estimated from the 2H2O concentration in urine. Lean body mass was then calculated from body water using previously published age dependent ratios of the water content of the lean body mass. Fat mass was calculated as the difference of body weight and lean body mass. A good correlation was found between body water and body weight. Linear regression revealed TBW = 0.589 BW + 0.728 (r = 0.99). Body water, lean body mass and fat mass were found to change with age. The fat content of the body increases during the first six months of life. It then decreases until four to five years then rising again until 15 years of age.

[1]  C. Consolazio,et al.  Use and evaluation of gas chromatography for determination of deuterium in body fluids. , 1971, Journal of applied physiology.

[2]  P. Klein,et al.  In vivo isotope-fractionation factors and the measurement of deuterium- and oxygen-18-dilution spaces from plasma, urine, saliva, respiratory water vapor, and carbon dioxide. , 1988, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[3]  R. Akers,et al.  Total body water by D2O dilution using saliva samples and gas chromatography. , 1970, Journal of applied physiology.

[4]  F. Haschke,et al.  Body composition of reference children from birth to age 10 years. , 1982, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[5]  B. Friis‐Hansen Changes in Body Water Compartments during Growth , 1957, Helvetica paediatrica acta.

[6]  C. Fusch,et al.  Measurement of D2O Concentrations at Tracer Levels in Small Samples Obtained from Paediatric Patients , 1988, Journal of clinical chemistry and clinical biochemistry. Zeitschrift fur klinische Chemie und klinische Biochemie.

[7]  A. K. Solomon,et al.  The measurement of total body water in the human subject by deuterium oxide dilution; with a consideration of the dynamics of deuterium distribution. , 1950, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[8]  D. Cheek,et al.  Body water, height, and weight during growth in normal children. , 1966, American journal of diseases of children.

[9]  L. P. Novâk Total body water and solids in six to seven-year-old children: differences between the sexes. , 1966, Pediatrics.

[10]  H. Lukaski,et al.  A simple, inexpensive method of determining total body water using a tracer dose of D2O and infrared absorption of biological fluids. , 1985, The American journal of clinical nutrition.