Seasonality and Differential Growth Patterns of Body Dimensions of Children in a Rural Community of Yucatan, Mexico
Lucely Nataly Molina‐Félix, Barry Bogin, Sudip Datta Banik

TL;DR
This study found that preschool children in a rural Mexican community grow differently depending on the season, with lower leg growth being more affected than trunk growth.
Contribution
The study identifies seasonal variation in children's body dimension growth and links it to environmental and health factors.
Findings
Children grew more in height and body lengths between the nortes and dry seasons.
Weight increased most during the nortes season and least during the rainy season.
Knee height ratio showed greater seasonal variation compared to sitting height ratio.
Abstract
Seasonality of human growth evinces the association between environmental variation, including the physical and the social–economic–political environment, and biological changes. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the seasonality of the growth of body dimensions (absolute and relative to height) of 2‐ to 5‐year‐old children and their differential increment (percentage changes) in the dry, rainy, and “nortes” seasons at Quintana Roo in Yucatan, Mexico. The study was mixed‐longitudinal. Repeated anthropometric measurements (height, weight, head circumference, sitting height, knee height) were recorded at the end of the dry, rainy, nortes, and again dry seasons of 31 preschool children in Quintana Roo, Yucatan. The derived variables (body dimensions relative to height) were the sitting height ratio (SHR) and knee height ratio (KHR). Data on seasonal variation in children's…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Birth, Development, and Health
