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Published in: Obesity Surgery 6/2014

01-06-2014 | Original Contributions

Validity of Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis for Measuring Changes in Body Water and Percent Fat After Bariatric Surgery

Authors: Elizabeth M. Widen, Gladys Strain, Wendy C. King, Wenwen Yu, Susan Lin, Bret Goodpaster, John Thornton, Anita Courcoulas, Alfons Pomp, Dympna Gallagher

Published in: Obesity Surgery | Issue 6/2014

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Abstract

Background

Few studies have validated bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) following bariatric surgery.

Methods

We examined agreement of BIA (Tanita 310) measures of total body water (TBW) and percent body fat (%fat) before (T0) and 12 months (T12) after bariatric surgery, and change between T0 and T12 with reference measures: deuterium oxide dilution for TBW and three-compartment model (3C) for %fat in a subset of participants (n = 50) of the Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery-2.

Results

T0 to T12 median (IQR) change in deuterium TBW and 3C %fat was −6.4 L (6.4 L) and −14.8 % (13.4 %), respectively. There were no statistically significant differences between deuterium and BIA determined TBW [median (IQR) difference: T0 −0.1 L (7.1 L), p = 0.75; T12 0.2 L (5.7 L), p = 0.35; Δ 0.35 L(6.3 L), p = 1.0]. Compared with 3C, BIA underestimated %fat at T0 and T12 [T0 −3.3 (5.6), p < 0.001; T12 −1.7 (5.2), p = 0.04] but not change [0.7 (8.2), p = 0.38]. Except for %fat change, Bland-Altman plots indicated no proportional bias. However, 95 % limits of agreement were wide (TBW 15–22 L, %fat 19–20 %).

Conclusions

BIA may be appropriate for evaluating group level response among severely obese adults. However, clinically meaningful differences in the accuracy of BIA between individuals exist.
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Metadata
Title
Validity of Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis for Measuring Changes in Body Water and Percent Fat After Bariatric Surgery
Authors
Elizabeth M. Widen
Gladys Strain
Wendy C. King
Wenwen Yu
Susan Lin
Bret Goodpaster
John Thornton
Anita Courcoulas
Alfons Pomp
Dympna Gallagher
Publication date
01-06-2014
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Obesity Surgery / Issue 6/2014
Print ISSN: 0960-8923
Electronic ISSN: 1708-0428
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11695-014-1182-5

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