Changes in Physical Activity and Sedentary Patterns on Cardiometabolic Outcomes in the Transition to Adolescence: International Children's Accelerometry Database 2.0

Pedro B. Júdice, Megan Hetherington-Rauth, Kate Northstone, Lars Bo Andersen, Niels Wedderkopp, Ulf Ekelund, Luís B. Sardinha

Resultado de pesquisarevisão de pares

19 Citações (Scopus)

Resumo

Objective: To examine the associations of changes in physical activity and sedentary patterns with changes in cardiometabolic outcomes from childhood to adolescence. Study design: Youth from the International Children's Accelerometry Database (n = 1088; 55% girls), aged 8-13 years and followed for ∼4 years, were used in this analysis. Hip-mounted accelerometers were used and all physical activity intensities were expressed as the % of total wear-time. Sedentary time was separated into time spent in bouts <10 minutes and ≥10 minutes. A composite z score for cardiometabolic risk (CMR score) was computed by summing the standardized values for systolic and diastolic blood pressure, triglycerides (TG), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-c), and the inverse high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Multivariate analyses were performed using adjusted linear regression models. Results: Increase in sedentary time was unfavorably associated with changes in CMR score (β = 0.021; CI 0.004-0.037), TG (β = 0.003; CI 0.001-0.005), and diastolic blood pressure (β = 0.068; CI 0.009-0.128). Decrease in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity was unfavorably associated with changes in LDL-c (β = −0.009; CI −0.017 to −0.001) and TG (β = −0.007; CI −0.013 to −0.001). Increase in ≥10 minutes sedentary time was unfavorably associated with changes in CMR score (β = 0.017; CI 0.004-0.030), LDL-c (β = 0.003; CI 0.000-0.005), and TG (β = 0.003; CI 0.000-0.004). Decrease in light-intensity physical activity was unfavorably associated with changes in CMR score (β = −0.020; CI = −0.040 to 0.000). Conclusions: More physical activity and less prolonged sedentary time are beneficial for cardiometabolic health in youth transitioning to adolescence.

Idioma originalInglês
Páginas (de-até)166-173.e1
RevistaJournal of Pediatrics
Volume225
DOIs
Estado da publicaçãoPublicadas - out. 2020
Publicado externamenteSim

Nota bibliográfica

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Inc.

Financiamento

Financiadoras/-esNúmero do financiador
Department of Health, Diabetes UK
Fundação para a Ciência e TecnologiaUIDB/00447/2020
Medical Research Council, Research and Development Office for the Northern Ireland Health and Social Services
National Prevention Research InitiativeG0701877
Scottish Executive Health Department
Welsh Assembly Government
Economic and Social Research Council
British Heart Foundation
Cancer Research UK
World Cancer Research Fund
Stroke Association
Chief Scientist Office
Fundação para a Ciência e TecnologiaSFRH/BPD/115977/2016

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