Body surface area

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In physiology and medicine, the body surface area (BSA) is the measured or calculated surface of a human body. For many clinical purposes BSA is a better indicator of metabolic mass than body weight because it is less affected by abnormal adipose mass. Estimation of BSA is simpler than many measures of volume.

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[edit] Uses

Examples of uses of the BSA:

[edit] Calculation

Various calculations have been published to arrive at the BSA without direct measurement, starting in 1916 with the Dubois & Dubois formula. A commonly used formula is the Mosteller formula, published in 1987:

Metric (area in square metres from weight in kilograms and height in centimetres):

{x}= \sqrt\frac{\mbox{weight} \times \mbox{height} }{3600}

half-English units (area in square metres from weight in pounds, height in inches):

{x}= \sqrt\frac{\mbox{weight} \times \mbox{height} }{3131}

Another is the Haycock formula (in children):

{x}=0.024265 \times {weight \mbox{ (kg)}}^{0.5378} \times {height \mbox{ (cm)}}^{0.3964}

Du Bois & Du Bois, Arch Intern Med 1916;17:863:

{x}=(71.84 \times {weight \mbox{ (kg)}}^{0.425} \times {height \mbox{ (cm)}}^{0.725})\ / \ 10000

Gehan EA, George SL, Cancer Chemother Rep 1970;54:225-235:

\mathrm{S} = 0.0235 \times height \mbox{ (cm)}^{0.42246} \times weight \mbox{ (kg)}^{0.51456}

Boyd's Formula:

\mathrm{S} = 0.0003207
 \times height \mbox{ (cm)}^{0.3} \times weight \mbox{ (g)}^{(0.7285 - 0.0188 \log_{10}{weight \mathrm{ (g)}})}

National Cancer Institute[citation needed]

{x}=({weight \mbox{ (kg)}}^{0.425} \times {height \mbox{ (cm)}}^{0.725})\ / \ 139.315

[edit] Normal values

"Normal" BSA is generally taken to be 1.7 m² for an adult.

Average BSA values
Neonate 0.25
Child 2 years 0.5
Child 9 years 1.07
Child 10 years 1.14
Child 12-13 years 1.33
For men 1.9
For women 1.6

[edit] References

  • Mosteller RD. Simplified calculation of body-surface area. N Engl J Med 1987;317:1098. PMID 3657876.
  • Haycock GB, Schwartz GJ, Wisotsky DH Geometric method for measuring body surface area: A height-weight formula validated in infants, children and adults J Pediatr 1978;93:62-66

[edit] External links