About this Research Topic
The WHO developed the Body Mass Index (BMI) as a measure of overweight and obesity for use in epidemiological studies. However, as BMI increases with body weight, the weight increase may be due to different reasons spanning from an increase in muscle mass, adiposity, or bone density. This makes (BMI) a poor risk discriminator as it does not distinguish between weight increases from fat, lean muscle, or bone., this derives from the fact that all pathology arising from overweight and obesity is due to excess fat mass. Resulting from this, there was a shift to the use of percentage body fat as a better anthropometric index for CVD risk prediction.
Further observations showed that it is not just the amount fat, but it’s location in the body that relates to cardiometabolic disease. Measures of central obesity became of high interest, following the finding that visceral adipose tissue is the principal contributor to cardiometabolic diseases. The result was the development of anthropometric indices like waist circumference (WC), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), and waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) ratio, which proved to be more accurate than BMI in CVD risk prediction.
Coming home to sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the WHO standard measurement of BMI has shown to be somewhat unsuitable, as genetic factors modify its association with CVD risk; calling for the need to find some other appropriate anthropometric measure. WC, which is simple and works well among Asian populations, does not always reflect visceral obesity as it includes abdominal subcutaneous fat. It also does not factor in individual and ethnic differences in phenotype and body composition. Some authors have posited that anthropometric measures in different ethnic groups have different predictive powers in cardiometabolic diseases, hence, the need to establish appropriate cut-off points for each index in different populations. This gave rise to the abdominometer concept with the abdominal height (AH) being the anthropometric measure considered appropriate for SSA.
This issue on Cardiovascular Anthropometry For Large Scale Population Studies in Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine aims to highlight the latest research on cardiovascular anthropometry in large population groups. Articles that discuss and refine the WHO recommended measure, BMI, making it more predictive of cardiometabolic diseases are of special interest in this collection.
The submission of review articles, original research articles, brief communications and meta-analysis are welcome.
Keywords: Cardiovascular anthropometry, Obesity measures, Central adiposity, Visceral adiposity, Cardiometabolic diseases
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.