Ke. Chad et al., Body composition in nutritionally adequate ambulatory and non-ambulatory children with cerebral palsy and a healthy reference group, DEVELOP MED, 42(5), 2000, pp. 334-339
Bone-mineral content (BMC; g) and density (BMD; g/cm(2)) were measured by d
ual energy X-ray absorptiometry in the proximal femur, femoral neck, and to
tal body of nutritionally adequate children (n=17; 11 girls, six boys; aged
7.6 to 13.8 years) with spastic cerebral palsy (GP), Bone-mineral-free lea
n tissue (BMFL; g) and fat mass (FM; g) were obtained from total body scans
. Chronological and developmental age-based z scores for the children with
CP were derived from a pediatric database (n=894). Children with CP had BMC
z scores from -1.8 (total body) to -3.2 (femoral neck) SDs below the norma
tive sample. Non-independent ambulators had lower z scores for total body B
MD, femoral neck BMD, and BMC than independent ambulators, The BMFL z score
of individuals with GP was 2 SDs below that of the reference group and hig
her in the independent ambulators than in the non-independent ambulators, w
hereas FM deviated little. These findings suggest that non-nutritional fact
ors, such as ambulation, account for the low BMC, BMD, and BMFL tissue obse
rved in this population.