| Literature DB >> 36201018 |
César Agostinis-Sobrinho1, Justina Kievišienė2, Alona Rauckienė-Michaelsson2, Viney Prakash Dubey2, Sigute Norkiene2, Carla Moreira3, Luís Lopes3, Rute Santos3,4,5.
Abstract
Cardiorespiratory fitness has been substantially associated with health status. However, longitudinal studies on cardiorespiratory fitness and ideal cardiovascular health behavior (ICHB) in adolescents are scarce. The aim of this study was to evaluate the longitudinal association between ICHB (at baseline) and cardiorespiratory fitness (at follow-up). This is a 2-year prospective analysis of 445 adolescents (232 girls) aged 12-18 years. The ICHB was developed by the American Heart Association as meeting the ideal health behaviors for a healthy diet, physical activity, smoking status, and body mass index. ANCOVAS adjusted by age, sex, pubertal stage, socioeconomic status, and cardiorespiratory fitness showed that the higher the number of ICHB metrics accumulated at baseline (from 1 to 4), the higher the cardiorespiratory fitness levels over a 2-year period (p = 0.038). In logistic regressions, after adjusting for potential confounders, the odds ratios for having high cardiorespiratory fitness at follow-up was 4.9 (95% CI, 1.2-20.1, p = 0.02) for those who accumulated all four metrics of ICHB, when compared to those with 1 or less metrics of ICHB. In addition, the higher the number of ICHB metrics accumulated, the higher the likelihood of having a high cardiorespiratory fitness level over a 2-year period (p for trend = 0.01).Entities:
Keywords: Aerobic fitness; Metabolic health; Youth; Cardiovascular health behavior; Physical activity
Year: 2022 PMID: 36201018 PMCID: PMC9540137 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-022-04623-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.860
Characteristics of study participants
| Characteristics at baseline | Total (445) | Boys (213) | Girls (232) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (year) | 13.8 (± 1.6) | 13.7 (± 1.5) | 13.9 (± 1.6) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 20.9 (± 3.5) | 20.7 (± 3.5) | 21.03 (± 3.5) |
| KIDMED index | 7.21 (± 2.0) | 7.11 (± 2.1) | 7.3 (± 1.8) |
| Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (min/day) | 56.5 (± 20.6) | 62.3 (± 19.8) | 51.1 (± 19.9)* |
| Socioeconomic Status | 6.5 (± 1.6) | 6.6 (± 1.5) | 6.8 (± 1.5) |
| Pubertal status A: ≤ III/IV/V (%) | 46/43/11 | 54/35/11 | 38/51/11 |
| Pubertal status B: ≤ III/IV/V (%) | 32/49/19 | 39/50/11 | 26/48/26 |
| Nonsmokers, | 416 (93) | 197 (92) | 222 (95) |
| Non-overweight, | 329 (73) | 163 (76) | 168 (72) |
| Physically active, | 147 (33) | 96 (44) | 52 (22)* |
| Healthy diet, | 207 (46) | 97 (45) | 111 (47) |
*Significantly different from girls (p < 0.05)
Pubertal stage A, breast development in girls; genital development in boys. Pubertal stage B, pubic hair development
Cardiorespiratory fitness levels at baseline and at follow-up by cardiovascular health behaviors at baseline
| Cardiovascular health behaviors | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36.9 (± 4.7)* | 37.9 (± 4.9)* | 46.1 (± 6.2) | 46.9 (± 6.9) | |
| 36.6 (± 4.8) | 34.4 (± 6.3) | 45.5 (± 6.2) | 44.9 (± 7.2) | |
| 39.9 (± 4.7)* | 38.5 (± 5.2)* | 47.5 (± 5.8)* | 48.1 (± 6.9)* | |
| 37.2 (± 4.1) | 35.7 (± 4.2) | 41.3 (± 4.6) | 42.6 (± 6.1) | |
| 39.8 (± 5.1) | 38.7 (± 5.5) | 46.8 (± 6.1)* | 47.3 (± 6.9) | |
| 38.9 (± 4.6) | 37.4 (± 4.8) | 45.1 (± 6.1) | 46.1 (± 7) | |
| 40.1 (± 4.5)* | 38.4 (± 5.1)* | 46.8 (± 6.0)* | 47.8 (± 6.5)* | |
| 38.3 (± 4.7) | 37.8 (± 4.9) | 45.3 (± 6.2) | 45.9 (± 7.2) | |
*Different from non-ideal (p < 0.05 for all)
Fig. 1Differences on cardiorespiratory fitness levels (at baseline and follow-up) by ideal cardiovascular health behaviors (at baseline). Model 1: unadjusted. Model 2: adjusted for age, sex, pubertal status, and socioeconomic status. The longitudinal analysis (follow-up) was additionally adjusted for its corresponding baseline levels. a Significantly different from all. b Significantly different from 1 and 2. c Significantly different from all. d Significantly different from all
Fig. 2Odds ratios of ideal cardiovascular health behavior metrics (and 95% confidence interval) for high cardiorespiratory fitness at 2-year follow-up, adjusted for age, sex, pubertal status, and socioeconomic status and cardiorespiratory fitness at baseline
| • |
| • |
| • |
| • |