Anthropometric Assessment
Anthropometric assessment uses physical measurements of the body - weight, height, circumferences, and skinfold thicknesses - to estimate body size, proportions, and composition as indicators of nutritional status. Because the measurements are non-invasive, inexpensive, and reproducible, anthropometry is a cornerstone of nutritional assessment across clinical and population settings.
Definition
Anthropometric assessment is the measurement and interpretation of body dimensions - such as weight, height, circumferences, and skinfold thickness - to characterise body size and composition as markers of nutritional status.
Scope
The entry covers the principal anthropometric measures (body weight, height, body mass index, mid-upper-arm and calf circumference, skinfolds, and waist circumference), their standardisation, and their role as phenotypic indicators within malnutrition frameworks. It is a methodological reference and does not provide individualised cut-offs for diagnosis or treatment.
Core questions
- Which anthropometric measures best reflect body energy and protein stores?
- How does measurement standardisation affect the reliability of anthropometric data?
- How do anthropometric indices serve as phenotypic criteria for malnutrition?
Key concepts
- Body mass index (BMI)
- Mid-upper-arm circumference
- Calf circumference
- Skinfold thickness
- Waist circumference
- Reduced muscle mass as a phenotypic criterion
- Measurement standardisation and reliability
Mechanisms
Anthropometric indices act as surrogates for body compartments. Weight relative to height (BMI) indexes overall energy stores; arm and calf circumferences and skinfolds approximate muscle and subcutaneous fat; and serial changes track loss of tissue over time. These measures gain meaning when taken with standardised technique and compared against reference data, because measurement error and edema can distort interpretation. In contemporary malnutrition criteria, low BMI and reduced muscle mass function as phenotypic indicators that are combined with etiologic factors.
Clinical relevance
Anthropometry contributes objective, repeatable indicators used in malnutrition frameworks and in tracking change over time. As reference material it explains how body measurements index nutritional status; it describes method rather than prescribing thresholds or interventions for an individual.
Epidemiology
Anthropometric measures are central to nutritional surveillance worldwide because they can be collected at scale; the WHO expert committee report on anthropometry standardised their use and interpretation across age groups and populations.
Evidence & guidelines
The WHO (1995) report provides the reference framework for anthropometric use and interpretation, and the GLIM criteria (Cederholm et al., 2019) incorporate low BMI and reduced muscle mass as phenotypic criteria. The Anthropometric Standardization Reference Manual (Lohman et al., 1988) codifies measurement technique. Cohort evidence such as the Health ABC study (Houston et al., 2008) links body composition change to nutritional exposures.
History
Anthropometry has roots in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century physical measurement, becoming a standardised tool of nutritional surveillance through mid-century survey work. The 1988 standardisation manual and the 1995 WHO report consolidated technique and interpretation, and the inclusion of BMI and muscle mass in the 2019 GLIM criteria reaffirmed anthropometry's diagnostic role.
Debates
- Is BMI an adequate marker of nutritional status?
- BMI is simple and widely available but cannot distinguish fat from muscle and is confounded by edema and ageing, prompting greater emphasis on muscle-mass measures within phenotypic criteria.
Key figures
- Timothy Lohman
- Reynaldo Martorell
- Tommy Cederholm
Related topics
Seminal works
- who-1995
- lohman-1988
- cederholm-2019-glim
Frequently asked questions
- Why is mid-upper-arm circumference useful when weight cannot be measured?
- It can be obtained quickly without scales and reflects muscle and subcutaneous fat in the arm, making it a practical surrogate marker of nutritional status in settings where weighing is impractical or where fluid shifts distort body weight.
- Can anthropometry alone diagnose malnutrition?
- No. Anthropometric findings such as low BMI or reduced muscle mass are phenotypic indicators that contemporary frameworks combine with etiologic factors and other assessment domains rather than relying on a single measurement.