Exploring the Relationship Between the Indices of Body Composition With Grip Strength Performance and Peak VO2

Background The importance of measurements of body composition in terms of various indices including Body Mass Index (BMI), Body Surface Area (BSA), Body Size Index (BSI), and Waist to Height ratio (WtHR) in the diagnosis of health risks and mortality outcome analysis has largely been limited to thei...

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Veröffentlicht in:Curēus (Palo Alto, CA) CA), 2023-06, Vol.15 (6), p.e40874-e40874
Hauptverfasser: S, Sushmitha, Kothari, Ruchi, Mittal, Gaurav, Gopani, Maitri, A, Prashanth, Bokariya, Pradeep, Vemparala, Sai Shanmukh, Tamrakar, Shubhi, S, Abishek, A, Bennita
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background The importance of measurements of body composition in terms of various indices including Body Mass Index (BMI), Body Surface Area (BSA), Body Size Index (BSI), and Waist to Height ratio (WtHR) in the diagnosis of health risks and mortality outcome analysis has largely been limited to their use relating to determining abdominal obesity. The understanding of the extent of implications of the newer, underutilized indices of body composition is deficient. Peak VO (maximal oxygen uptake) majorly serves for the evaluation of the measure of aerobic capacity. Grip strength performance is a simple, primary, objective predictor of overall physical status and muscular and cardiovascular fitness. This study aimed to derive the relationship between a gamut of parameters such as BMI, BSA, WtHR, BSI, grip strength performance and peak VO investigated using the latest scientific methodology in a cross-section of the population in a rural tertiary care center. Methodology This study was a descriptive, cross-sectional study carried out in a rural medical college in central India. Sixty participants from the healthcare setting were considered eligible for the study within the age group of 18 to 45 years. Anthropometric assessments like height (in cm), weight (in kg), waist circumference (in cm), and BMI were carried out. BSA, WtHR, and BSI were calculated using the respective formulae. VO  max (maximal oxygen uptake) recordings were done using the treadmill/ergometer and metabolic module of LabChart software (Bella Vista, New South Wales, Australia). Grip Strength Performance was quantified by measuring the amount of static force with which the hand is able to squeeze a transducer. It was measured using Grip Force Transducer (MLT004 / ST) from AD Instruments (Bella Vista, New South Wales, Australia). Results Upon analysis, a significant negative correlation was obtained between BSI and BMI (r= -0.51, p
ISSN:2168-8184
2168-8184
DOI:10.7759/cureus.40874