Physical activity interacts with adiposity in determining cardiometabolic risk in adolescents.

Journal: Pediatric Exercise Science
Published:
Abstract

Background: Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) has been negatively associated with cardiometabolic risk. We sought to determine if MVPA interacts with body-mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) in determining cardiometabolic risk in adolescents.

Methods: This cross-sectional study included cardiometabolic risk (blood pressure [BP], nonfasting lipids) screening and a 7-day recall physical activity questionnaire in 4,104 adolescents (51% male; mean age: 14.6 ± 0.5 years old). WC- and BMI- percentiles were used to define anthropometric categories (including obese adolescents: 90th WC, 85th BMI).

Results: Obesity in adolescents was associated with lower levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL cholesterol (Estimate [EST]: -0.28(0.07) mmol/L, p < .001) and higher non-HDL cholesterol (EST: +0.38(0.14) mmol/L, p = .008). Each additional day with 20 min of MVPA was associated with lower non-HDL cholesterol (EST: -0.014(0.005) mmol/L/days/week, p = .003), independent of anthropometric category. Each additional day with 20 min of MVPA was associated with an increased odds ratio (OR) for higher BP category in obese adolescents (OR: 1.055, 95% CI: 1.028-1.084, p < .001) and a lower odds ratio for higher BP category in presumably-muscular adolescents (OR: 0.968, 95% CI: 0.934-0.989, p = .005).

Conclusions: An increase in MVPA was associated with an increased likelihood for higher BP category in obese adolescents. The dose-response relationship between physical activity and cardiometabolic risk needs to be evaluated in adolescents of varying anthropometry categories.

Authors
Laura Banks, Cedric Manlhiot, Stafford Dobbin, Don Gibson, Karen Stearne, Jolie Davies Shaw, Nita Chahal, Amanda Fisher, Brian Mccrindle
Relevant Conditions

Obesity