The association between social factors and body length proportions in Polish schoolchildren from Lower Silesia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1515/anre-2016-0029Keywords:
body proportion, social status, height, tibia, childrenAbstract
Many studies worldwide have shown that social factors are significantly associated with growth in childhood. However, very few researchers studied influence of social factors on body length proportions. The aim of the present study was the assessment how urbanization level, sibship size and parental education may affect body length proportions in schoolchildren. 325 boys and 335 girls aged 7-18 years were measured in schools in Wrocław, two small towns and villages around these towns. Height, sitting height, leg length , and lower leg length were measured in all children, then relative lengths (in relation to height) were calculated: leg, femur, lower leg, estimated leg and lower leg length to leg length ratio. Height was standardized on age using LMS parameters for CDC 2002 year cohort. Other indices were standardized on age by using residuals variance derived from linear regressions. Four-way analysis of variance was used for height and each index, where independent variables were four social factors. Except for father’s education in boys, no other social factor was significant associated with height. Urbanization level significantly differed almost all indices, whereas father’s education level was significantly associated with relative leg length in girls and estimated leg length in both sexes. Our study has shown that the segments of lower limb seems to be more sensitive than height to the effect of social factors. In Lower Silesia, the level of urbanization is still related to differences in environmental conditions, enough to significantly affect growth of children, especially within the segments of lower limbs.
Downloads
References
Auerbach BM, Sylvester AD. 2011. Allometry and apparent paradoxes in human limb proportions: Implications for scaling factors. Am J Phys Anthropol 144:382-91.
View in Google Scholar
Bailey SM, Xu J, Feng JH, Hu X, Zhang C, et al. 2007. Tradeoffs between oxygen and energy in tibial growth at high altitude. Am J Hum Biol 19:662-68.
View in Google Scholar
Baum A, Garofalo JP, Yali AM. 1999. Socioeconomic status and chronic stress: does stress account for SES effects on health? Ann NY Acad Sci 896:131-44.
View in Google Scholar
Bielicki T. 1986. Physical growth as a measure of the economic well-being of populations: The twentieth century. In: F Falkner, and JM Tanner, editors. Human Growth, 2nd edition. Vol. 3. New York: Plenum Press. 283-305.
View in Google Scholar
Bielicki T. 1999. Secular trends in growth: human biologist’s contribution to the understanding of social change. In: FE Johnston, B Zemel, and PB Eveleth, editors. Human Growth in Context. London: Smith-Gordon. 303-11.
View in Google Scholar
Bielicki T, Szklarska S, Kozieł S, Welon Z. 2003. Transformacja ustrojowa w Polsce w świetle antropologicznych badań 19-letnich mężczyzn. Wrocław: Monografie Zakładu Antropologii PAN 23.
View in Google Scholar
Bogin B, Rios L. 2003. Rapid morphological change in living humans: implications for modern human origins. Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 136:71-84.
View in Google Scholar
Dowd JB, Simanek AM, Aiello AE. 2009. Socio-economic status, cortisol and allostatic load: a review of the literature. Int J Epidemiol 38:1297-309.
View in Google Scholar
Gunnell DJ, Smith GD, Frankel SJ, Kemp M, Peters TJ. 1998. Socio-economic and dietary influences on leg length and trunk length in childhood: a reanalysis of the Carnegie (Boyd Orr) survey of diet and health in prewar Britain (1937-39). Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol 12 Suppl 1:96-113.
View in Google Scholar
Holliday TW, Ruff CB. 2001. Relative variation in human proximal and distal limb segment lengths. Am J Phys Anthropol 116:26-33.
View in Google Scholar
Hulanicka B, Brajczewski C, Jedlińska W, Sławińska T, Waliszko A. 1990. City-town-villages. Differences in growth and development of children in Poland. Wrocław: Monography of Department of Anthropology Polish Academy of Sciences.
View in Google Scholar
Jedlińska W, Lebioda H. 1981. The influence of some socio-economic factors on the height and body weight of Wrocław girls. Studies in Physical Anthropology 7:29-38.
View in Google Scholar
Jedlińska W, Sławińska T, Kotlarz K. 1988. Influence of family socio-economic status on height in children from a rich farming region. Studies in Physical Anthropology 9:17-37.
View in Google Scholar
Jelenkovic A, Ortega-Alonso A, Rose RJ., Kaprio J, Rebato E, Silventoinen K. 2011. Genetic and environmental influences on growth from late childhood to adulthood: A longitudinal study of two Finnish twin cohorts. Am J Hum Biol 23:764-73.
View in Google Scholar
Koziel S. 2014. Changes in social gradients in biological features. Do we go toward the biological egalitarianism? In: S Kozieł, N Nowak-Szczepanska, and A Gomula, editors. Anthropological Survey of Children and Youth in Poland between 1966-2012. Secular Changes and Social Variation. Wrocław: Oficyna Wydawnicza Arboretum. 186-94.
View in Google Scholar
Kozieł S, Nowak-Szczepańska N, Gomula A. 2014. Antropologiczne badania dzieci i młodzieży w Polsce w latach 1966-2012. Zmiany sekularne i gradienty społeczne. Wrocław: Oficyna Wydawnicza Arboretum.
View in Google Scholar
Lampl M, Kuzawa CW, Jeanty P. 2003. Prenatal smoke exposure alters growth in limb proportions and head shape in the midgestation human fetus. A J Hum Biol 15:533-546.
View in Google Scholar
Lupien SJ, King S, Meaney MJ, McEwen BS. 2000. Child’s stress hormone levels correlate with mother’s socioeconomic status and depressive state. Biol Psyc 48:976-80.
View in Google Scholar
Marrod MD, Mesa MS, Ar Chiga J, Prez-Magdaleno A. 2000. Short Report: trend in menarcheal age in Spain: rural and urban comparison during a recent period. Ann Hum Biol 27(3):313-19.
View in Google Scholar
Meadows L, Jantz R. 1995. Allometric secular change in the long bones from the 1800s to the present. J Forensic Sci 40:762-67.
View in Google Scholar
Nowak-Szczepańska N, Gomula A. 2014. Changing pattern of social variation in height and BMI between 1966 and 2012 in Polish schoolchildren. In: S Kozieł, N Nowak-Szczepanska, and A Gomula, editors. Anthropological Survey of Children and Youth in Poland between 1966-2012. Secular Changes and Social Variation. Wrocław: Oficyna Wydawnicza Arboretum. 65-98.
View in Google Scholar
Padez C, Rocha MA. 2003. Age at menarche in Coimbra (Portugal) school girls: a note on the secular changes. Ann Hum Biol 30(5):622-32.
View in Google Scholar
StatSoft, Inc. (2014). STATISTICA (data analysis software system), version 12. www. statsoft.com.
View in Google Scholar
Tanner JM. 1990. Growth as a mirror of conditions in society. In: G Lidgren, editor. Growth as a Mirror of Condition in Society. Stockholm: Stockholm Institute of Education Press. 9-48.
View in Google Scholar
Ulijaszek SJ. 1995. Human Energetics in Biological Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
View in Google Scholar
Wadsworth ME, Hardy RJ, Paul AA, Marshall SF, Cole TJ. 2002. Leg and trunk length at 43 years in relation to childhood health, diet and family circumstances; evidence from the 1946 national birth cohort. Int J Epidemiol 31:383-90.
View in Google Scholar
Waliszko A, Jedlinska W, Kotlarz K, Krajewska A, Palus D, Slawinska T, Szwedzinska A. 1985. Growth and development of Polish school children examined in 1978. Studies in Physical Anthropology 8:3-25.
View in Google Scholar
Wronka I. 2010. Association between BMI and age at menarche in girls from different socio-economic groups. Anthropol Anz 68(1):43-52.
View in Google Scholar
Wronka I, Pawlińska-Chmara R. 2005. Menarcheal age and socio-economic factors in Poland. Ann Hum Biol 32(5):630-38.
View in Google Scholar
Young EA, Abelson J, Lightman SL. 2004. Cortisol pulsatility and its role in stress regulation and health. Fron Neuroendo 25:69-76.
View in Google Scholar
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.