Objective measured physical activity and metabolic syndrome score in children and adolescents: The UP&DOWN longitudinal study

Author:

Sánchez‐Delgado Alejandro1ORCID,Sánchez‐Parente Sandra12ORCID,Martínez‐Gómez David345ORCID,Gómez‐Martínez Sonia6,Veiga Oscar L.7ORCID,Marcos Ascensión6,Castro‐Piñero José12ORCID,Pérez‐Bey Alejandro12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Education, GALENO Research Group, School of Education University of Cádiz Cádiz Spain

2. Instituto de Investigación e Innovación Biomédica de Cádiz (INiBICA) Cádiz Spain

3. Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, School of Medicine Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Madrid Spain

4. CIBERESP (CIBER of Epidemiology and Public Health) Madrid Spain

5. IMDEA‐Food Institute, CEI UAM+CSIC Madrid Spain

6. Institute of Food Science, Technology and Nutrition (ICTAN), Spanish National Research Council Madrid Spain

7. Department of Physical Education, EstiLIFE Research Group, Sports and Human Movement Autonomous University of Madrid Madrid Spain

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionWe aimed to analyze the cross‐sectional and longitudinal association of physical activity (PA) levels and PA patterns with metabolic syndrome score (MetS) in children and adolescents.MethodsA total of 175 children (82 females) and 188 adolescents (95 females) were included. Objective PA levels and patterns were determined by accelerometry. MetS was computed from waist circumference, systolic blood pressure, triglycerides, high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol, and glucose levels. Different linear regression models were implemented to examine the associations of PA with MetS.ResultsVigorous PA, moderate‐vigorous PA, number of bouts per day in 10 min (N10), and total time in bouts per day in 10 min (T10) were negatively associated with MetS in male children and adolescents at cross‐sectional level (β ranging from −0.005 to −0.164, all p < 0.05). Total time in bouts per day in 20 min in male children, and vigorous PA and N10 in female children were longitudinally and negatively associated with MetS (β ranging from −0.011 to −0.247, all p < 0.05).ConclusionsAssociations of PA and MetS were observed at cross‐sectional level in males and longitudinally in female children. The associations in PA patterns were found when patterns were grouped into bouts of 10 min. Therefore, for future studies of PA with health markers in the pediatric population, it would be advisable to choose bouts of shorter duration.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

Reference48 articles.

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