Publication | Open Access
Influence of heredity and environment in determination of skinfold thickness in children.
160
Citations
14
References
1975
Year
FitnessGeneticsSkinfold ThicknessGenetic EpidemiologyDermatoglyphicTotal VariationEducationAnthropometric IndicatorAnatomyDermatologyBody CompositionHeritabilityAllometric StudyTrunk FatSex DifferenceChild DevelopmentBody SizePediatricsBody ImageSubscapular Skinfold ThicknessesMedicineDermal Structure
Triceps and subscapular skinfold thicknesses were measured in 222 pairs of like-sex twins (78 monozygotic and 144 dizygotic) aged 3-15 years. Log transformations of the measurements were standardized for age and sex and the results used to estimate heritability--that is, the proportion of total variation determined by genetic factors. The overall contribution of non-genetic familial effects was small. There were appreciable differences in heritability between limb and trunk fat and between the sexes and at different ages. Over the age of 10 heritability was high for both sites in boys and girls. In younger children environmental factors contributed more to the variation.
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