Anthropometric measurements as a key diagnostic tool for familial partial lipodystrophy in women
Victor Rezende Veras, Grayce Ellen da Cruz Paiva Lima, Ivana da Ponte Melo, Virginia Oliveira Fernandes, Fabia Karine de Moura Lopes, Camila Lopes do Amaral, Maria Helane Gurgel Castelo, Larissa Luna Queiroz, Jessica Silveira Araújo, Cynthia Melissa Valerio

TL;DR
This study identifies new cutoff points for thigh skinfold and leg fat percentage to help diagnose lipodystrophy in Brazilian women.
Contribution
The study proposes novel cutoff values for thigh skinfold and leg fat percentage specific to a Brazilian population.
Findings
A thigh skinfold cutoff of 20 mm was found for FPLD diagnosis in women, lower than previously described.
An LFP < 29.6% was identified as a useful diagnostic tool for FPLD in women.
The LMNA variant in codon 582 was the most common in the studied population.
Abstract
Familial Partial Lipodystrophy (FPLD) is a disease with wide clinical and genetic variation, with seven different subtypes described. Until genetic testing becomes feasible in clinical practice, non-invasive tools are used to evaluate body composition in lipodystrophic patients. This study aimed to analyze the different anthropometric parameters used for screening and diagnosis of FPLD, such as thigh skinfold thickness (TS), Köb index (Köbi), leg fat percentage (LFP), fat mass ratio (FMR) and leg-to-total fat mass ratio in grams (LTR), by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, focusing on determining cutoff points for TS and LFP within a Brazilian population. Thirty-seven patients with FPLD and seventy-four healthy controls matched for body mass index, sex and age were studied. Data were collected through medical record review after signing informed consent. All participants had body fat…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSustainable Building Design and Assessment · Sustainable Development and Environmental Policy · Urban Planning and Valuation
