Comprehensive Assessment of the Components of Energy Expenditure in Infants Using a New Infant Respiratory Chamber
Conrad R. Cole, MD,
Russell Rising, PhD,
Amin Hakim, MD,
Marco Danon, MD,
Rajeev Mehta, MD,
Shahana Choudhury, MD,
Mamatha Sundaresh, MD and
Fima Lifshitz, MD
Maimonides Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, 4802 Tenth Ave (C.R.C., R.R., A.H., M.D., R.M., M.S., F.L.), Interfaith Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, 1545 Atlantic Ave (S.C.), Brooklyn, New York

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Fig. 1. Infant respiratory chamber and related instrumentation. Note the glove ports surrounding the plexiglass enclosure, allowing for parental interaction.
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Fig. 2. Correlation between energy expenditure during the test (top plot) and basal metabolic rate (bottom plot) with fat-free mass for all 21 infants. Regression line is the line of best fit determined by regression analysis.
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Fig. 3. Uncorrected index of physical activity (top plot) and energy expenditure (bottom plot) for one infant (Patient #1) over the course of the energy expenditure measurement within the infant respiratory chamber. Large black marks represent the time when parents were interacting with the infant.
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Fig. 4. Correlation between energy expenditure during the test for one infant (Patient #1) and the index of physical activity. Each data point is the average of five one-minute summaries as described in the text. All data points for this patient are represented. Regression line is the line of best fit determined by regression analysis.
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Copyright © 1999 by the American College of Nutrition.