Growth in height and its association with overweight and obesity in Mexican children: an evaluation based on a nationally representative sample (ENSANUT 2018)

Front Public Health. 2024 Mar 8:12:1339195. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1339195. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

The present study aimed to estimate the height growth curve for Mexican boys and girls based on their body mass index (BMI) status (normal and overweight/obese) and to develop a height Lambda, Mu, and Sigma (LMS) growth reference for Mexican children aged 2 to 18 years.

Methods: Chronological age and height records (7,097 boys and 6,167 girls) were obtained from the Mexican National Survey of Health and Nutrition database. Height growth curves were fitted using the Preece-Baines 1 (PB1) model and the LMS method.

Results: Age at peak height velocity (APHV) was 12.4 and 12.7 years for overweight-obese and normal-weight boys, respectively, and was 9.6 and 10.4 years for overweight-obese and normal-weight girls, respectively. Growth velocity was higher at the age of take-off (TO) in overweight-obese children than in normal-weight children (5.2 cm/year vs. 5 cm/year in boys and 6.1 cm/year vs. 5.6 cm/year in girls); nevertheless, the growth velocity at APHV was higher for normal-weight children than for overweight-obese children (7.4 cm/year vs. 6.6 cm/year in boys and 6.8 cm/year vs. 6.6 cm/year in girls, respectively). Distance curves developed in the present study and by the World Health Organization (WHO) using LMS showed similar values for L and S parameters and a higher M value compared with the WHO reference values.

Conclusion: This study concluded that overweight-obese children had earlier APHV and lower PHV than normal-weight children. Furthermore, Mexican children and adolescents were shorter than the WHO growth reference by age and sex.

Keywords: adolescence; children; growth velocity; peak height velocity; somatic maturity.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Body Height
  • Body Mass Index
  • Body Weight
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Overweight* / epidemiology
  • Pediatric Obesity* / epidemiology

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This article has been financially supported by CIPER. IF was partly funded by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), grant number UIDB/00447/2020 (or UIDP/00447/2020), attributed to CIPER–Centro Interdisciplinar para o Estudo da Performance Humana (unit 447; DOI: 10.54499/UIDB/00447/2020).