Body composition reference charts for infants from birth to 24 months: Multicenter Infant Body Composition Reference Study.

[1]  J. Ket,et al.  Body composition in preterm infants: a systematic review on measurement methods , 2022, Pediatric Research.

[2]  E. Hutton,et al.  Growth and body composition trajectories in infants meeting the WHO growth standards study requirements , 2022, Pediatric Research.

[3]  A. Kurpad,et al.  Body composition from birth to 2 years in term healthy Indian infants measured by deuterium dilution: Effect of being born small for gestational age and early catch-up growth , 2022, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[4]  E. Demerath,et al.  Infant sex differences in human milk intake and composition from 1- to 3-month post-delivery in a healthy United States cohort , 2021, Annals of human biology.

[5]  J. Twisk,et al.  Methods to Assess Fat Mass in Infants and Young Children: A Comparative Study Using Skinfold Thickness and Air-Displacement Plethysmography , 2021, Life.

[6]  S. Heymsfield,et al.  Body Composition Measurements from Birth through 5 Years: Challenges, Gaps, and Existing & Emerging Technologies—A National Institutes of Health workshop , 2020, Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity.

[7]  A. Hokken-Koelega,et al.  Longitudinal body composition assessment in healthy term-born infants until 2 years of age using ADP and DXA with vacuum cushion , 2020, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[8]  D. Glueck,et al.  Sex differences in infant body composition emerge in the first 5 months of life , 2019, Journal of pediatric endocrinology & metabolism : JPEM.

[9]  E. Demerath,et al.  New charts for the assessment of body composition, according to air-displacement plethysmography, at birth and across the first 6 mo of life. , 2019, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[10]  T. Cole,et al.  Body composition reference charts for UK infants and children aged 6 weeks to 5 years based on measurement of total body water by isotope dilution , 2019, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[11]  P. V. von Hurst,et al.  Air displacement plethysmography (pea pod) in full-term and pre-term infants: a comprehensive review of accuracy, reproducibility, and practical challenges , 2018, Maternal Health, Neonatology and Perinatology.

[12]  E. Forsum,et al.  Longitudinal assessment of body composition in healthy Swedish children from 1 week until 4 years of age , 2017, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[13]  K. Ong,et al.  Longitudinal fat mass and visceral fat during the first 6 months after birth in healthy infants: support for a critical window for adiposity in early life , 2017, Pediatric obesity.

[14]  K. Michaelsen,et al.  Body composition from birth to 6 mo of age in Ethiopian infants: reference data obtained by air-displacement plethysmography. , 2013, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[15]  W C Chumlea,et al.  Anthropometric protocols for the construction of new international fetal and newborn growth standards: the INTERGROWTH‐21st Project , 2013, BJOG : an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology.

[16]  J. Wells Body composition in infants: Evidence for developmental programming and techniques for measurement , 2012, Reviews in Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders.

[17]  D. Fields,et al.  Longitudinal Body Composition Data in Exclusively Breast‐Fed Infants: A Multicenter Study , 2011, Obesity.

[18]  P. Colditz,et al.  Body Composition From Birth to 4.5 Months in Infants Born to Non-Obese Women , 2010, Pediatric Research.

[19]  Mercedes Onis,et al.  WHO Child Growth Standards based on length/height, weight and age , 2006, Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992). Supplement.

[20]  Reynaldo Martorell,et al.  Measurement and standardization protocols for anthropometry used in the construction of a new international growth reference. , 2004, Food and nutrition bulletin.

[21]  S. Aitkens,et al.  A New Air Displacement Plethysmograph for the Measurement of Body Composition in Infants , 2003, Pediatric Research.

[22]  S van Buuren,et al.  Worm plot: a simple diagnostic device for modelling growth reference curves , 2001, Statistics in medicine.

[23]  N. Butte,et al.  Body Composition during the First 2 Years of Life: An Updated Reference , 2000, Pediatric Research.

[24]  M. Elia,et al.  The use of infrared spectrophotometry for measuring body water spaces. , 1999, Clinical chemistry.

[25]  C. Scrimgeour,et al.  High-Precision Determination of 2H/1H in H2 and H2O by Continuous-Flow Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry , 1995 .

[26]  S. Heymsfield,et al.  Height-normalized indices of the body's fat-free mass and fat mass: potentially useful indicators of nutritional status. , 1990, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

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

[28]  S. Fomon,et al.  Body composition of the male and female reference infants. , 2002, Annual review of nutrition.

[29]  T J Cole,et al.  Smoothing reference centile curves: the LMS method and penalized likelihood. , 1992, Statistics in medicine.