Reference Values for Weight, Height, Head Circumference, and Body Mass Index in Turkish Children
Overview
Pediatrics
Authors
Affiliations
Objective: This study aimed to integrate the existing updated reference standards for the growth of Turkish infants and children and to compare these values with World Health Organization (WHO) reference data, data from some European countries, and also with previous local data. Weight, height, and head circumference measurements were obtained on 2,391 boys and 2,102 girls who were regular attenders of a well child clinic and on 1,100 boys and 1,020 girls attending schools in relatively well-off districts in İstanbul. Mean number of measurements per child was 8.2±3.6 in the age group 0-5 years and 5.5±3.3 in the age group 6-18 years. All children were from well-to-do families and all were healthy. All measurements with the exception of measurements at birth, which were based on reported values, were done by trained personnel.
Methods: The LMS method was used in the analyses and in the construction of the percentile charts. There is an increase in weight for age and body mass index values for age starting in prepubertal ages, indicating an increasing trend for obesity.
Results: Compared to WHO reference data, weight and height values in Turkish children were slightly higher in infants and in children younger than 5 years, while they showed similarity to those reported for children from Norway and Belgium. Head circumference values, which were slightly higher than the WHO references in the first 5 years, were comparable to the data on Belgian and Norwegian children in the first 9 years of life. At older ages, Turkish children showed higher values for head circumference.
Conclusion: The relatively larger head circumference values were interpreted to reflect a genetic characteristic.
Serin O, Akbasli I, Cetin S, Koseoglu B, Deveci A, Ugur M JMIRx Med. 2025; 6:e57719.
PMID: 40036666 PMC: 11896559. DOI: 10.2196/57719.
Uner Asil E, Aygun O, Duman A, Gungor N BMC Pediatr. 2025; 25(1):125.
PMID: 39979884 PMC: 11844121. DOI: 10.1186/s12887-025-05445-7.
Demirkan F, Yetim Sahin A, Cakmak F, Akgun O, Guliyeva V, Tugrul Aksakal M Eur J Pediatr. 2025; 184(3):204.
PMID: 39969628 PMC: 11839685. DOI: 10.1007/s00431-025-06033-8.
Pediatric kidney transplant recipients are at an increased risk for dysbiosis.
Yilmaz G, Saygili S, Agbas A, Yilmaz E, Varis A, Canpolat N Front Microbiol. 2025; 16:1499813.
PMID: 39949623 PMC: 11823477. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2025.1499813.
Key Clinical and X-Ray Characteristics for the Diagnosis of Kenny-Caffey Syndrome Types 1 and 2.
Simsek E, Eren S, Cayir A, Tokur O, Cilingir O, Simsek T Mol Syndromol. 2025; 16(1):77-86.
PMID: 39911167 PMC: 11793900. DOI: 10.1159/000540377.