Cardiometabolic risk factors in children and adolescents from southern Brazil: comparison to international reference values
Author:
Welser Letícia1ORCID, Lima Rodrigo Antunes2, Silveira João Francisco1, Andersen Lars Bo3, Pfeiffer Karin Allor4, Renner Jane Dagmar Pollo15, Reuter Cézane Priscila16
Affiliation:
1. Graduate Program in Health Promotion, University of Santa Cruz do Sul (UNISC) , Santa Cruz do Sul , RS , Brazil 2. Research, Innovation and Teaching Unit, Parc Sanitari Sant Joan de Déu, CIBERSAM, Sant Boi de Llobregat , Barcelona , Spain 3. Department of Sport, Food and Natural Sciences , Western Norway University of Applied Sciences , Sogndal , Norway 4. Kinesiology Department , Michigan State University (MSU) , East Lansing , MI , USA 5. Department of Life Sciences , University of Santa Cruz do Sul (UNISC) , Santa Cruz do Sul , RS , Brazil 6. Health Sciences Department , University of Santa Cruz do Sul (UNISC) , Santa Cruz do Sul , RS , Brazil
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
To compare cardiometabolic risk factors of Brazilian children and adolescents with international reference values. Cardiometabolic risk factors constitute the Metabolic Syndrome, whose evaluation is important to assess pediatric populations’ health and potential to experience metabolic disorders.
Methods
Cross-sectional study that included 2,250 randomly selected children and adolescents (55.6% girls), aged 6 to 17. Cardiometabolic parameters (body mass index [BMI], waist circumference [WC], systolic and diastolic blood pressures [SBP and DBP], total cholesterol [TC], low-density lipoprotein cholesterol [LDL-C], high-density lipoprotein cholesterol [HDL-C], TC:HDL-C ratio, triglycerides [TG], glucose and peak oxygen uptake [VO2peak]), and clustered risk scores were compared to international age- and sex-specific reference values. A clustered risk score was calculated by summing the WC, glucose, SBP, TG, and the TC:HDL-C ratio Z-scores divided by five. A second clustered was calculated including VO2peak (inverted) Z-score, but divided by six.
Results
The clustered risk score, considering the all ages sample, was better in the Brazilian boys (−0.20 [−0.41;0.01] and −0.18 [−0.37;0.01], including or not VO2peak, respectively) but not significantly, and worse in girls (0.24 [0.05;0.43] and 0.28 [0.11;0.44], including or not VO2peak, respectively) than the international reference. Additionally, Brazilian youth had a statistically better profile in TC, LDL-C, HDL-C, TC:HDL-C ratio, and VO2peak (only girls) as well as a worse profile in BMI, WC, SBP, DBP, TG (only girls), and VO2peak (only boys).
Conclusions
The clustered cardiometabolic risk score (including or not VO2peak), considering the all ages sample, was better in the Brazilian boys, but not significantly, and worse in girls compared to the international reference.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Reference47 articles.
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