Primary Validation of the Submandibular Skinfold as an Anthropometric Measurement of Cardiometabolic Risk in People with Intellectual Disabilities
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ferrero Hernández, Paloma; Farías Valenzuela, Claudio; Ferrari, Gerson; Álvarez Arangua, Sebastián; Villalobos Flores, Hans; Valdivia Moral, Pedro AngelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Intellectual disability Cardiometabolic risk Obesity
Fecha
2023-01-17Referencia bibliográfica
Ferrero-Hernández, P.; Farías-Valenzuela, C.; Ferrari, G.; Álvarez-Arangua, S.; Villalobos-Flores, H.; Valdivia-Moral, P. Primary Validation of the Submandibular Skinfold as an Anthropometric Measurement of Cardiometabolic Risk in People with Intellectual Disabilities. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 1658. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031658
Resumen
The accumulation of body fat is an important cardiometabolic risk factor; however, there
is no consensus about which measure is more reliable for the assessment of cardiometabolic risk
in people with intellectual disabilities. The aim of the present study was to primarily validate the
submandibular skinfold as an anthropometric measurement of cardiometabolic risk in children,
adolescents, and adults with intellectual disabilities, using a cross-sectional study made up of
131 people (67.2% men) with mild and moderate intellectual disability. The cardiometabolic risk
indicators used were: body mass index (kg/m2), neck circumference (cm), waist circumference
(cm), calf circumference (cm) and waist-to-height ratio. Moderate correlations were demonstrated
between the submandibular skinfold measure and the anthropometric measurements analyzed in
the three age categories, showing the highest correlation (r = 0.70) between the submandibular
skinfold and BMI in the adolescent group and waist-to-height ratio in adults. The implementation
of the submandibular skinfold measurement is suggested as an easy, fast, and minimally invasive
anthropometric measurement as part of the physical and nutritional evaluation for the assessment of
cardiometabolic risk in people with intellectual disabilities.





