Familial correlations for height, sitting height and weight have been studied in a sample of 1278 siblings for the Biscay province (Basque Country), aged 4+ to 24+ years. The data have been internally standardized according to sex and age of individuals. The degree of resemblance among sibling has been expressed by intraclass correlation coefficients. The total sample has been divided into three age categories: < 12 years, 12-15 years, and > or = 15 years, in order to examine the effect of age on sibling correlations. In general, changes with age have been observed: sibling correlations for height show a clear upward trend through the considered growth period, reaching a value of 0.48 from 15 years of age. Intra-correlations for weight show a slight downward trend with age. Sitting height shows a rather low correlation before 12 years of age, but equally high values in the other two ranges of age (0.48 and 0.47, respectively). This study confirms that the sibling resemblance for the analysed trait fluctuated through the growth period--height and sitting height showing similar patterns of variation with age--and that, after puberty, the degree of genetic determination is higher for bone measurements than for weight.
Anthropometry, records of food intake, and bioelectric impedance were gathered from a sample of 297 adults of both sexes who lived in marginal districts in the town of Bilbao and benefited from a program of social assistance. This survey aimed to determine present nutritional status and to ascertain the relationship between food intake and nutritional conditions. A comparative evaluation of anthropometry and food intake was then carried out using a reference from the Basque Country and a control sample from the same area but from better-off nutritional and socioeconomic conditions. Males from low socioeconomic status (SES) displayed lower heights and weights compared to the local reference and control sample. They showed higher skinfold thickness than males in the local reference but lower thicknesses than those in the control sample. All anthropometric variables, except height, were higher in women of low socioeconomic status compared to the local reference and control sample. Low socioeconomic males had lower estimated percentage of body fat than the control sample, while females showed the opposite pattern. On the other hand, estimates of food intake in males did not reveal great differences among samples from different socioeconomic backgrounds, while low SES females had greater intakes of food than the better-off control sample. Estimated zinc intake showed differences by SES in both sexes.
Recent data about age at menarche in the biscay province (Basque Country, Spain) Data on menarcheal age were collected by the status quo method on a sample of 808 schoolgirls (8-19 years of age), from the Margen Izquierda area of the Biscay province (Basque Country). Probit analysis provided a mean age at menarche of 12.5_+ 0.05 years with a standard deviation of 1.0 years. The result was compared with data from other previous Basque studies and related to age at PHV of the same sample.
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