Body
Fat Part 3 - Assessing Body Fat
By stumptuous.com
Body fat is generally measured and expressed as a percentage. So,
if we have a 200 lb. person with 20% body fat, then we know that 40
lbs. of that person is body fat, and the rest is the good stuff: bones,
organs, and most importantly muscle. The non-fat-stuff is commonly
called lean body mass, or LBM. Our aforementioned person thus has
160 lbs. of LBM.
When calculating fat loss it is best to combine numeric weight loss
with the percentage of body fat. This is done because numeric weight
(i.e. the weight on the scale) does not give us the full picture of
how much of a person is fat and how much is LBM. If we take two people
who are 200 lbs., and one of them is our 20% body fat person, and
the second is someone with 10% body fat, clearly the second person
is in better shape. However, judging this by the scale alone would
be misleading. Many athletic people are "overweight" by
the standards of scale weight, but still fit and lean, because muscle
is much denser than fat. This is why the conventionally used body
mass index (BMI) is a poor tool of assessment for athletic people.
I have known several people who got in trouble from doctors, military
bosses, etc. for being overweight, when the assessor could clearly
observe that they were muscular and lean. Frankly, I'll be happy when
they junk that stupid BMI thing in favour of body composition tests,
and I'm not just saying that because I'm pushing "overweight"
myself.
To give you an idea of how body fat assessment can be used to establish
changes in body composition, let's say that we have a 200 lb. person
who begins a fitness program at 30% body fat. That means she has 60
lbs. of body fat and 140 lbs. of LBM. Let's then say that she gets
to 160 lbs. and 20% body fat. Now she has 32 lbs. of body fat, and
128 lbs. of LBM. Some LBM has been lost in the process, but it's only
12 lbs. worth, whereas 28 lbs. of body fat has been lost. Let's say
in a second example that our 200 lb. person hasn't been training or
eating right, and manages to get down to 160 lbs. through a combo
of chain smoking, black coffee, and long hours of low intensity, endurance-based
cardio. However, because of her poor training and eating habits, she's
only made it down to 25% body fat. This means she's lost 20 lbs. of
fat and 20 lbs. of muscle. Same finishing weight, big difference in
results. The second person will probably look and feel worse, will
not be as lean, and most importantly, will not have the all-important
LBM that keeps the metabolic fires stoked. The second person will
likely put that 40 lbs. right back on in the long run. The first and
second people are the same numeric weight, but their body composition
will be significantly different.
Having argued in favour of body fat assessment, I should caution you
that the tools of body fat assessment vary wildly in their accuracy
and ease of use. In general, it's a sad truth that the easier the
body fat measurement, the more inaccurate it's likely to be. Body
fat calculations are based on population norms, which at the time
many of the calculations were developed, meant white male college
students (they were easy to get hold of for university lab research,
which, by the way, is another reason to critically read scientific
studies that use this as a normative population). Athletes, people
of nonwhite backgrounds, older folks, basically anyone outside of
that "norm" can get an inaccurate reading. There are apocryphal
stories, for example, of black athletes getting negative body fat
percentage readings (this means, perhaps, that they actually give
body fat to the people around them?). I've heard people claim to be
4% body fat because their tape measurement said so, and I usually
tell them that if they're 4%, then:
a) they should see horizontal striations (ridges) on the muscles in
their ass;
b) they should be covered in visible veins (not just a few);
c) they should be able to see the lymph nodes in their groin;
d) unless they're a competing bodybuilder about to go on stage, their
family is probably booking their funeral.
Here's a rundown of ways to measure body fat, from easiest and most
inaccurate to hardest and most precise.
Tape measurements of body circumference (e.g. waist, hips) combined
with height/weight measurements are unbelievably inaccurate. Just
for fun, I tested a few of the online tape measurement calculators,
and got results ranging from 12% to 28% body fat. Tape measurements
are handy for knowing overall size losses or gains, but are largely
useless for knowing body fat.
Bioelectrical impedance devices, such as the Tanita body fat scale,
determine body fat by sending little electrical pulses through the
body. Not bad for average people, usually quite inaccurate for athletic
people. Measurements will also vary significantly based on hydration
levels. Still a margin of error in the range of +/- 5%, and there's
a big difference between 10% and 15%.
Skinfold calipers take a pinch of skin at various sites on the body.
This is more accurate if it's done by someone experienced, but there
is still a margin of error of around 2-3%. If you want to assess your
own body fat, this is probably the best way to do it as long as you
remember that you need practice, and the margin of error remains significant.
Hydrostatic, or underwater weighing, requires the person to be submerged
in a tank of water and to expel all the oxygen from their lungs as
they are measured. This is quite accurate but hard to obtain unless
you live near a friendly university research lab. DEXA, or dual energy
x-ray absorptiometry, is likewise accurate but also involves a complex
procedure with special equipment.
Autopsy is the most accurate and effective means of body fat assessment.
And, guess what, it's a little inconvenient for most of us.
I actually didn't mention the one method that's both easy and potentially
very accurate: visual inspection by a trained eye. People who've been
in the bodybuilding biz long enough, and who are sufficiently observant,
can tell someone's body fat just by looking at them. I can take a
pretty decent guess, but no doubt there are bodybuilding veterans
who have the incisive visual accuracy of autopsy. You don't need to
be a bodybuilding pro to do this yourself, though.
Sometimes the best tool for assessing your body fat is a full length
mirror and an overhead light. Look at yourself from all angles. Observe
any visible muscle definition: the "v" of the deltoids at
the top of the arm, the lumps of the ab muscles, the ridge under the
calf. Observe also where you deposit your fat: breasts, belly, upper
arms, waist, hips, thighs, lower back. If you like, take pictures
every month or few months, and use them for a visual comparison of
body fat gains or losses. Familiarizing yourself with your individual
body fat patterns will help you see changes in your body composition.
This exercise is meant to be simple observation only, not judgement.
Body fat normals
Normal and ideal ranges for body fat vary with gender. On average,
women have a higher body fat than men. At one extreme, male bodybuilders
before a contest can drop their body fat to around 4-5%, while women
can drop to around 6-7%, commonly with the assistance of drugs. Female
fitness competitors are usually in the range of 10-14%, depending
on the aesthetic of whatever it is they're posing for (e.g. swimsuit,
onstage, fitness shoots, etc.). These very low body fat percentages
are generally maintained for only a short period, normally before
a photo shoot or contest. Very low body fat percentages are extremely
difficult to maintain for most people, since the body has metabolic
and hormonal mechanisms in place to prevent what it perceives as a
shortage of available resources.
For general health and fitness, for men, somewhere between 10-15%
is a good range to shoot for, though the North American average is
undoubtedly higher. Men who want to see a six-pack of abs usually
have to be under 10-11% to do so, since that's normally where they
store fat. For women, 20-25% is the approximate ideal for general
health. Athletic women may keep their body fat as low as the mid-teens
with no ill effects, since energy balance (calories in versus calories
out) is the prime determinant of health in this case. While low body
fat is correlated with problems common to elite female athletes, such
as disordered or absent menstruation and loss of bone density, it
is not a particular body fat percentage per se which is responsible.
Rather, since low body fat is often correlated with a negative energy
balance (in other words, taking in fewer calories than one burns),
it can appear as if body fat levels alone are responsible. A lean
woman who is careful to adequately meet her nutritional and caloric
needs, and not overtrain, should see no detrimental effects from lower
than average body fat.
For men, anything over 20% approaches obese territory, while for women
this percentage is closer to 30% and over. Folks who have been overfat
for a long time, particularly if they were overfat as children, will
find it more difficult to drop to the lower end of the body fat range.
One piece of good news, however, at least for pear shaped people,
is that gynoid fat deposition is associated with fewer adverse health
effects than android fat deposition. So, women with a gynoid fat pattern
can carry a bit more fat with fewer consequences than the android
folks (sorry, but that's biology for you).
I usually hover in the range of 15-18%, depending on the way I'm training,
and my training goals. Once I start getting to around 15%, people
start to tell me that my face is looking fuglier than normal.[grin]
For gaining strength and mass, it appears that a slightly higher body
fat percentage is ideal. As always, an ideal body fat percentage for
you will depend on many individual things: gender, age, overall health
and medical conditions (including supplementation with hormones),
starting body fat levels, and training goals.