Your BSA: 1.99 m²

BSA Calculation Results

Mosteller
1.99
m² — most common
DuBois & DuBois
1.98
m² — classic formula
Haycock
2
m² — paediatric use
Weight80 kg
Height178 cm
BSA (Mosteller)1.99 m²
BSA (DuBois)1.98 m²
BSA (Haycock)2 m²

Typical BSA ranges

PopulationAverage BSA
Newborn0.25 m²
Child (2 yr)0.5 m²
Child (10 yr)1.14 m²
Adult female1.6 m²
Adult male1.9 m²

Why Body Surface Area Matters in Medicine

Body surface area (BSA) is essential for drug dosing in oncology and paediatrics. Chemotherapy doses are calculated in mg/m² of BSA rather than mg/kg body weight, because tumour drug sensitivity and organ toxicity both scale with body surface. BSA is also used to calculate cardiac index (cardiac output per m² of BSA), to size prosthetic heart valves, and to estimate burns coverage using the Rule of Nines. Average adult BSA is approximately 1.7 m² for women and 1.9 m² for men.

BSA Formulas Compared

FormulaBest used for
DuBois & DuBois (1916)General clinical use
Mosteller (1987)Simplest, widely used — √(H × W / 3600)
Haycock (1978)Paediatric patients
Gehan & George (1970)Chemotherapy dosing

BSA in Clinical Medicine

Body Surface Area (BSA) is used in medicine because many physiological measurements scale better with body surface than with weight alone. Chemotherapy dosing uses BSA because anticancer drugs have a narrow therapeutic window — too little and they're ineffective; too much and they're toxic. The Mosteller formula (most widely used today) calculates BSA as the square root of (height in cm × weight in kg / 3600). The DuBois formula, published in 1916, is BSA = 0.007184 × height^0.725 × weight^0.425. Haycock's formula is preferred for paediatric patients because it performs better at extremes of body size.

A typical adult BSA is 1.7–1.9 m². The average male is approximately 1.9 m² and the average female 1.6 m². Burn patients are assessed using the Rule of Nines, which divides the body into regions each representing 9% of BSA — critical for calculating fluid resuscitation volumes.

BSA Formula Comparison

FormulaEquationBest For
Mostellersqrt(height(cm) × weight(kg) / 3600)General adults
DuBois0.007184 × H^0.725 × W^0.425Historical standard
Haycock0.024265 × H^0.3964 × W^0.5378Paediatrics
Boyd0.0003207 × H^0.3 × W^(0.7285 − 0.0188 log W)Neonates
Gehan-George0.0235 × H^0.42246 × W^0.51456Widely cited
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