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Anthropometry & coaching

Body Frame Type

Estimate bone frame size from elbow width and height to better contextualize training, nutrition, and realistic progress expectations.

Determine your body frame type

Educational method based on elbow width and height.

1 Sex 2 Height 3 Elbow 4 Result

“These categories do not set your limits. They help tailor training and nutrition to your bone structure.”

Reading the result

Small frame

Fine bone structure. Greater attention to relative strength, energy intake, and protein intake.

Medium frame

Average bone structure. Broad programming flexibility depending on the goal.

Large frame

Broad bone structure. Favorable leverage for strength, with more attention to joints and bodyweight management.

Practical tip — Small frame

Aim for 1.8–2.2 g/kg protein and build progressive strength cycles.

Practical tip — Medium frame

Use standard strength / hypertrophy cycles, then adjust according to the goal and recovery.

Practical tip — Large frame

Break up heavy volume, monitor recovery, mobility, and total joint load.

Endomorph / Mesomorph / Ectomorph: outdated?

The term morphotype refers to a person’s general build, especially the balance between muscle mass, fat mass, and bone structure.

In the 1940s, psychologist William Sheldon popularized three broad body-type categories:

Ectomorph

Narrow build, fine bones, fast metabolism, and more difficulty gaining weight or muscle.

Mesomorph

Balanced frame, broader shoulders, and a natural tendency to develop muscle mass.

Endomorph

Larger frame, stronger baseline, and a higher tendency to store body fat.

These terms are still used in fitness, but they are descriptive labels, not strict scientific categories. Lifestyle, diet, and training strongly shape physical appearance alongside genetics.

Why bone frame is more useful for coaching

Unlike broad endo / meso / ecto labels, elbow width is an objective anthropometric measure.

It mainly reflects genetic bone structure and changes very little with age or training.

This is why classic small, medium, and large frame classifications are based on elbow width adjusted for height.

Knowing your bone frame type helps contextualize expectations:

  • A small frame may generally make muscle gain harder, but can be favorable for definition, endurance, and relative strength.
  • A large frame often provides mechanical advantages for strength and hypertrophy, but requires more attention to bodyweight and joint stress.
  • A medium frame sits between these extremes and usually responds well to most classic training approaches.
This concept does not define your limits. It helps adapt nutrition and training to improve the quality of the plan.

Strengths & limitations

Strengths

  • Use the result as a planning context: cycles, volume, density, and progression.
  • Combine it with wrist / ankle size, body fat percentage, training history, and injury profile.
  • Remember that bone structure is mostly genetic, while appearance also depends on lifestyle and nutrition.

Limitations

  • Educational and statistical tool, not a medical tool.
  • Sensitive to measurement errors: elbow angle, tool placement, or repeated inconsistency.
  • For teenagers or older adults, consider growth or bone density changes.
  • Always interpret the result in context: sport, history, goals, and training tolerance.

From theory to practice with DietHelper

Knowing your frame size is useful. Applying it in real client follow-ups is where it becomes valuable.

In DietHelper, elbow width is integrated into BodyFat Blueprint with a complete interpretation table, a personalized protein intake indicator, and an analysis linking bone structure, lean mass, and nutrition goals.

You save time in assessments and deliver more personalized recommendations.

Download DietHelper Offline trial

Scientific references

  1. Frisancho, A. R. (1990). Anthropometric Standards for the Assessment of Growth and Nutritional Status. University of Michigan Press. Includes elbow width and other anthropometric indices.
  2. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (1983). Desirable Weight Tables. Used elbow or wrist breadth to classify body frame size.
  3. NHANES Anthropometry Procedures Manual. Official protocol for measuring elbow breadth and defining body frame size.