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Leg length, body proportion, and health: a review with a note on beauty

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posted on 2014-04-11, 09:01 authored by Barry Bogin, Maria Ines Varela Silva
Decomposing stature into its major components is proving to be a useful strategy to assess the antecedents of disease, morbidity and death in adulthood. Human leg length (femur + tibia), sitting height (trunk length + head length) and their proportions, for example, (leg length/stature), or the sitting height ratio (sitting height/stature × 100), among others) are associated with epidemiological risk for overweight (fatness), coronary heart disease, diabetes, liver dysfunction and certain cancers. There is also wide support for the use of relative leg length as an indicator of the quality of the environment for growth during infancy, childhood and the juvenile years of development. Human beings follow a cephalo-caudal gradient of growth, the pattern of growth common to all mammals. A special feature of the human pattern is that between birth and puberty the legs grow relatively faster than other post-cranial body segments. For groups of children and youth, short stature due to relatively short legs (i.e., a high sitting height ratio) is generally a marker of an adverse environment. The development of human body proportions is the product of environmental x genomic interactions, although few if any specific genes are known. The HOXd and the short stature homeobox-containing gene (SHOX) are genomic regions that may be relevant to human body proportions. For example, one of the SHOX related disorders is Turner syndrome. However, research with non-pathological populations indicates that the environment is a more powerful force influencing leg length and body proportions than genes. Leg length and proportion are important in the perception of human beauty, which is often considered a sign of health and fertility. © 2010 by the author.

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School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Citation

BOGIN, B. and VARELA-SILVA, M.I., 2010. Leg length, body proportion, and health: a review with a note on beauty. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 7 (3), pp. 1047 - 1075.

Publisher

© 2010 by the authors; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Publication date

2010

Notes

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/). It was published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (http://www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph) and received second prize in the ‘Reviews’ category of the Best Paper Award 2014 run by the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.

eISSN

1660-4601

Language

  • en

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