@article{MAKHILLRJMS201711412174, title = {Anthropometrically Determined Subcutaneous Fat Distribution among Urban South African Children: A Principal Components Analysis}, journal = {Research Journal of Medical Sciences}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {174-180}, year = {2017}, issn = {1815-9346}, doi = {rjmsci.2017.174.180}, url = {https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?issn=1815-9346&doi=rjmsci.2017.174.180}, author = {Daniel Ter,Brandon and}, keywords = {principal components analysis,ethnic variation,Subcutaneous fat distribution,children,South African,centralized}, abstract = {Body fat distribution is deleterious to health. This study evaluates subcutaneous fat distribution among South African children, by utilising Principal Components Analysis (PCA). This cross-sectional study involved 1136 participants (548 boys and 588 girls) and 581 black and 555 white children from 12 public schools in Central Pretoria, South Africa. Stature, body mass and eight skinfolds: triceps, subscapular, biceps, supraspinale, abdomen, front thigh, iliac crest and medial calf were measured. PCA technique was applied to examine the components loadings. An eigen value of >1.0 was retained for analysis. Boys and girls showed positive loadings in all the skinfolds thickness, implying a fatness or size factor component with a total variance of 48.3 and 54.4% for boys and girls, respectively. Similarly, black and white children’s skinfolds thickness loaded positively on the first component indicating a fatness or size factor component and explaining 52.8 and 48.9% in black and white children, respectively. The trunk-extremity and upper-lower body extremity fat patterning components are discernible among the children. There were variations in indices of fat patterning studied across gender and race. Girls possessed higher adiposity in their subscapular and triceps areas whereas boys showed propensity to centralized fat pattern. Also, this study demonstrates dissimilar pattern in the trunk-extremity and upper-lower trunk components in both the black and white South African children. There is need to control central fat patterning in the children.} }