| Literature DB >> 27997601 |
Raphael Gonçalves de Oliveira1,2, Dartagnan Pinto Guedes1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metabolic syndrome (MetS) has been diagnosed in adolescents and among the associated factors are low levels of physical activity, sedentary behavior over long periods and low cardiorespiratory fitness. However, specifically in adolescents, studies present conflicting results. The aim of the present study was to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies, in order to map the association between physical activity, sedentary behavior, cardiorespiratory fitness and MetS in adolescents.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27997601 PMCID: PMC5173371 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flowchart presenting the summary of searches carried out in the literature.
Studies associating physical activity with metabolic syndrome in adolescents.
| Study, country | Sample (number, gender, age) | Design | MetS (criteria and prevalence) | Physical activity measure and classification criteria | Adjustments | Results ( | Qual 0–10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bermúdez-Cardona [ | N = 96, 54 (M), 42 (F), 10–18 yrs | CC | Ford [ | Questionnaire (3 DPAR): METs (day); MVPA (blocks); VPA (blocks) | Not applicable | No difference between groups (obese with MetS, obese without MetS and normal weight without MetS) | 8 |
| Rafraf [ | N = 216, 216 (F), 14–17 yrs | CS | De Ferranti [ | Questionnaire (IPAQ): METs (< 3 = low; 3–6 = moderate; ≥ 6 = vigorous) | Not applicable | No difference between groups with and without MetS | 8 |
| Fadzlina [ | N = 1,014, 387 (M), 627 (F), 13 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Questionnaire: low or moderate/high | NR | No association | 4 |
| Fam [ | N = 777, 457 (M), 320 (F), 12–18 yrs | CS | Cook [ | Questionnaire (MAQ): METs (< 3 = low; 3–6 = moderate; ≥ 6 = vigorous) | Age, gender and maternal education | No association | 9 |
| Mehairi [ | N = 998, 515 (M), 483 (F), 12–18 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Questionnaire (IPAQ): METs (< 3 = low; 3–6 = moderate; ≥ 6 = vigorous) | No adjustment | No association | 6 |
| Múnera [ | N = 225 (overweight or obese), 115 (M), 110 (F), 10–18 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire (3 DPAR): METs (day); VPA (≥ 1 block of 30 min); VPA (≥ 2 blocks of 30 min) | Not applicable | No difference between groups (no components, with one, two, or three components of MetS) | 9 |
| You [ | N = 606, 331 (M), 275 (F), 12–18 yrs | CS | Cook [ | Questionnaire (12 months): Number of days of VPA in the week (≤ 3 or > 3) | NR | Higher prevalence of MetS among those with higher VPA. No association | 9 |
| Tavares [ | N = 210, 100 (M), 110 (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire (15 days): active or underactive | Not applicable | No difference in the prevalence of MetS between PA levels | 9 |
| Stabelini Neto [ | N = 456, 233 (M), 223 (F), 10–18 yrs | CS | Cook [ | Questionnaire (3 days): MVPA min/day (< 60 = inactive; ≥ 60 and < 90 = active; ≥ 90 = very active) | Age and gender | Greater prevalence of MetS according to the decrease in PA. No association | 9 |
| Mikołajczak [ | N = 778, 369 (M), 409 (F), 16–18 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire: low or moderate/high | NR | No association | 5 |
| Aboul Ella [ | N = 4,252, 1,807 (M), 2,445 (F), 10–18 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire (7 days): active or inactive | NR | OR 1.9 [CI 95%, 1.5 to 2.47] for inactive and MetS | 7 |
| Nguyen [ | N = 495, NR (M), NR (F), 13–16 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Accelerometer (7 days): median MVPA (≥ 3 METs); min/day and quartiles | Age and economic situation | Median MVPA was lower in the group with MetS. OR 5.3 [CI95%, 1.5 to 19.1] for lower PA and MetS (1st vs. 4th quartile) | 9 |
| Budak [ | N = 790, 349 (M), 441 (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire: low or moderate/high | No adjustment | No association | 8 |
| Ekelund [ | N = 1,535, NR (M), NR (F), 10–15 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Accelerometer (4 days): total time of daily PA | Age, gender and nationality | No difference for PA between the groups with or without MetS. OR 0.4 [CI 95%, 0.18 to 0.88] for longer daily PA and lower chance of MetS | 9 |
| McMurray [ | N = 389, 212 (M), 177 (F), 14–17 yrs (at follow-up) | PRO (7 yrs) | Jolliffe [ | Questionnaire (YHS): PA (total) score and tertiles (low, moderate, high) | Gender, BMI, blood pressure and cholesterol | MetS group (14–17 yrs) presented lower PA (baseline and follow-up). OR 5.11 [CI 95%, 1.05 to 49.13] for low (vs. High) PA in childhood (7–10 yrs) and MetS in adolescence | 9 |
| Mark [ | N = 1,803, 1,005 (M), 798 (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Jolliffe [ | Questionnaire (30 days): MVPA min/day (0–14; 15–29; 30–44; ≥ 45) | Age, smoking and screen time | No association | 8 |
| Pan [ | N = 3,457, NR (M), NR (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire (30 days): average MVPA in min/day (< 30th percentile = low; 30–60 = moderate; ≥ 60 = high) | Not applicable | No difference in the prevalence of MetS between PA levels | 7 |
M: male; F: female; NR: not reported; CC: case-control study; CS: cross-sectional study; PRO: prospective study; IDF: International Diabetes Federation; MetS: Metabolic syndrome; PA: Physical activity; METs: Metabolic equivalent; MVPA: moderate-to-vigorous physical activity; VPA: vigorous physical activity; 3DPAR: 3-day Physical Activity Recall; IPAQ: International Physical Activity Questionnaire; MAQ: modifiable activity questionnaire; YHS: Youth Health Survey; BMI: body mass index; OR: odds ratio; CI 95%: Confidence interval of 95%;
*Harmonized criteria refers to the use in combination of two or more criteria.
Studies associating sedentary behavior with metabolic syndrome in adolescents.
| Study, country | Sample (number, gender, age) | Design | MetS (criteria and prevalence) | Sedentary behavior measure and classification criteria | Adjustments | Results ( | Qual 0–10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bermúdez-Cardona [ | N = 96, 54 (M), 42 (F), 10–18 yrs | CC | Ford [ | Recall (3 DPAR): screen hours/day (TV) | Not applicable | No difference between groups (obese with MetS, obese without MetS and normal weight without MetS) | 8 |
| Fadzlina [ | N = 1,014, 387 (M), 627 (F), 13 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Questionnaire (weekdays and weekend): Screen hours/day (≤ 2 or > 2) | NR | No association | 4 |
| Mehairi [ | N = 993, 509 (M), 484 (F), 12–18 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Questionnaire (7 days): Screen hours/day (< 2 or ≥ 2) | Age and type of school | No association | 6 |
| Múnera [ | N = 225 (overweight or obese), 115 (M), 110 (F), 10–18 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Recall (3 DPAR): screen hours/day (TV) | Not applicable | No difference between groups (no components, with one, two, or three components of MetS) | 9 |
| You [ | N = 606, 331 (M), 275 (F), 12–18 yrs | CS | Cook [ | Questionnaire (one weekend): screen hours/day (TV or COM; ≤ 2 or > 2) | NR | Higher prevalence of MetS among those with longer TV, but not COM. OR 2.00 [CI 95%, 1.00 to 3.97] for greater TV time and MetS | 9 |
| Tavares [ | N = 210, 100 (M), 110 (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | Questionnaire: Screen hours/day (< 2 or ≥ 2) | Not applicable | No difference in the prevalence of MetS between higher or lower screen time | 9 |
| Kang [ | N = 845, 449 (M), 396 (F), 10–18 yrs | CS | Ford [ | Questionnaire (7 days): Screen hours / week (TV and COM); total and quartiles (≤ 16; 17–24; 25–34; ≥ 35) | Age, gender, economic status and area of residence | Higher prevalence of MetS according to higher screen time. Screen time higher in the group with MetS. OR 2.23 [CI 95%, 1.02 to 4.86] for more screen time (≥ 35 h vs. ≤ 16 h) and MetS | 10 |
| Ekelund [ | N = 2,900, NR (M), NR (F), 10–15 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Questionnaire: Screen hours/day (TV) | Not applicable | Screen time higher in the group with MetS | 9 |
| Mark [ | N = 1,803, 1,005 (M), 798 (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Jolliffe [ | Questionnaire (30 days): Screen hours/day (≤ 1, 2, 3, 4, or ≥ 5) | Age, smoking and physical activity | Higher prevalence of MetS according to higher screen time. OR 2.90 [CI 95%, 1.39 to 6.02] for higher screen time (≥ 5 h vs. ≤ 1 h) and MetS | 8 |
M: male; F: female; NR: not reported; CC: case-control study; CS: cross-sectional study; IDF: International Diabetes Federation; MetS: Metabolic syndrome; 3DPAR: 3-day Physical Activity Recall; COM: computer; OR: odds ratio; CI 95%: Confidence interval of 95%;
*Harmonized criteria refers to the use in combination of two or more criteria.
Studies associating cardiorespiratory fitness with metabolic syndrome in adolescents.
| Study, country | Sample (number, gender, age) | Design | MetS (criteria and prevalence) | Cardiorespiratory fitness measure and classification criteria | Adjustments | Results ( | Qual 0–10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laurson [ | N = 379, 213 (M), 166 (F), 12–18 yrs | CS | Harmonized criteria | VO2Peak (maximal treadmill test): FitnessGram classification (“Healthy Fitness Zone "; "Need to improve"; or "Needs Improvement/Risk Zone”) | No adjustment | OR 3.9 [CI 95%, 1.6–9.1] for "Needs Improvement" and MetS or OR 4.7 [CI 95%, 2.0 to 11.0] for "Needs Improvement/Risk Zone" and MetS | 6 |
| Stabelini Neto [ | N = 456, 233 (M), 223 (F), 10–18 yrs | CS | Cook [ | VO2Max (20 meter shuttle run test): tertiles (low, moderate and high) | Age and gender | Greater prevalence of MetS according to the decrease in CRF. OR 3.0 [CI 95%, 1.13 to 7.94] for low CRF (vs. high) and MetS | 9 |
| Moreira [ | N = 517, 220 (M), 297 (F), 15–18 yrs | CS | IDF [ | PACER (20 meters): FitnessGram classification (“below the healthy zone "; or "inside/above the healthy zone”) | Not applicable | Higher prevalence of MetS for those below the healthy zone | 9 |
| Ekelund [ | N = 2,446, NR (M), NR (F), 10–15 yrs | CS | IDF [ | Maximal cycle ergometer test: watts per fat-free mass, per minute | Age, gender and nationality | Group with MetS presented lower values of CRF. OR 0.43 [CI 95%, 0.24 to 0.80] for high CRF and lower chance of MetS | 9 |
| McMurray [ | N = 389, 212 (M), 177 (F), 14–17 yrs (at follow-up) | PRO (7 yrs) | Jolliffe [ | VO2Max (submaximal test on cycle ergometer): absolute and/or tertile value (low, moderate or high) | Gender, BMI, blood pressure and cholesterol level | MetS group (14–17 yrs) presented lower CRF (baseline and follow-up). OR 6.09 [CI 95%, 1.18 to 60.29] for low (vs. high) and OR 5.58 [CI 95%, 1.15 to 53.75] (vs. moderate) CRF in childhood (7–10 yrs) and MetS in adolescence | 9 |
| Janssen [ | N = 1,561, 829 (M), 732 (F), 12–19 yrs | CS | Jolliffe [ | VO2Max (submaximal treadmill test): tertiles (low, moderate or high) | Age, gender, ethnicity, smoking, economic status, lipid and carbohydrate intake | OR 0.18 [CI 95%, 0.07 to 0.48] for moderate and OR 0.01 [CI 95%, 0.00 to 0.07] for high CRF (vs. low) and lower chance of MetS | 7 |
M: male; F: female; NR: not reported; CS: cross-sectional study; PRO: prospective study; IDF: International Diabetes Federation; MetS: Metabolic syndrome; CRF: cardiorespiratory fitness; VO2Peak: peak oxygen uptake; VO2Max: maximum oxygen consumption; PACER: Progressive aerobic cardiovascular and endurance run; BMI: body mass index; OR: odds ratio; CI 95%: Confidence interval of 95%;
*Harmonized criteria refers to the use in combination of two or more criteria.
Fig 2Forest plot of the primary and subgroup analysis comparing odds ratios for metabolic syndrome among adolescents with moderate/high levels of physical activity versus low level of physical activity.
Fig 3Forest plot of the primary and subgroup analysis comparing odds ratios for metabolic syndrome among adolescents with low screen time versus high screen time.
Fig 4Forest plot of the primary and subgroup analysis comparing odds ratios for metabolic syndrome among adolescents with moderate/high cardiorespiratory fitness versus low cardiorespiratory fitness.