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A cross-sectional investigation of preadolescent cardiometabolic health: associations with fitness, physical activity, sedentary behavior, nutrition, and sleep

A cross-sectional investigation of preadolescent cardiometabolic health: associations with fitness, physical activity, sedentary behavior, nutrition, and sleep
A cross-sectional investigation of preadolescent cardiometabolic health: associations with fitness, physical activity, sedentary behavior, nutrition, and sleep

BACKGROUND: Cardiometabolic disease (CMD) risk often begins early in life. Healthy lifestyle behaviors can mitigate risk, but the optimal combination of behaviors has not been determined. This cross-sectional study simultaneously examined the associations between lifestyle factors (fitness, activity behaviors, and dietary patterns) and CMD risk in preadolescent children.

METHODS: 1480 New Zealand children aged 8-10 years were recruited. Participants included 316 preadolescents (50% female, age: 9.5 ± 1.1 years, BMI: 17.9 ± 3.3 kg/m 2). Fitness (cardiorespiratory fitness [CRF], muscular fitness), activity behaviors (physical activity, sedentary, sleep), and dietary patterns were measured. Factor analysis was used to derive a CMD risk score from 13 variables (adiposity, peripheral and central hemodynamics, glycemic control, and blood lipids).

RESULTS: Only CRF (β = -0.45, p < 0.001) and sedentary time (β = 0.12, p = 0.019) were associated with the CMD risk score in the adjusted multivariable analysis. CRF was found to be nonlinear (VO 2 max ≤ ≈42 mL/kg/min associated with higher CMD risk score), and thus a CRF polynomial term was added, which was also associated (β = 0.19, p < 0.001) with the CMD risk score. Significant associations were not found with sleep or dietary variables.

CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that increasing CRF and decreasing sedentary behavior may be important public health targets in preadolescent children.

2227-9067
Castro, Nicholas
dfd91206-043a-4856-a79f-328eaaeb765b
Zieff, Gabriel
fe0464d5-788b-4f03-b558-f05c4c7179a9
Bates, Lauren C
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Pagan Lassalle, Patricia
c7e7bda2-8822-428c-8bdc-a808beb4201d
Higgins, Simon
d19c4ed5-66a9-4360-a806-41e67a8b19e0
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Lark, Sally
4efafc16-2d48-4e22-8337-b6fb410f70a6
Skidmore, Paula
d538e7da-b185-4c7f-9ef3-fa130293bb63
Hamlin, Michael J
0c52e9a4-6d8a-4237-b502-4853ce9cdfe3
Signal, T Leigh
bdf4100f-ab74-43c2-9911-b367629950e9
Williams, Michelle A
90364b54-80d0-4070-ace1-349149da998e
Stoner, Lee
0f9dd581-205f-490d-8879-7ba7cfa51450
Castro, Nicholas
dfd91206-043a-4856-a79f-328eaaeb765b
Zieff, Gabriel
fe0464d5-788b-4f03-b558-f05c4c7179a9
Bates, Lauren C
8a9535b3-6f76-4aed-a675-5ad92129c8d4
Pagan Lassalle, Patricia
c7e7bda2-8822-428c-8bdc-a808beb4201d
Higgins, Simon
d19c4ed5-66a9-4360-a806-41e67a8b19e0
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Lark, Sally
4efafc16-2d48-4e22-8337-b6fb410f70a6
Skidmore, Paula
d538e7da-b185-4c7f-9ef3-fa130293bb63
Hamlin, Michael J
0c52e9a4-6d8a-4237-b502-4853ce9cdfe3
Signal, T Leigh
bdf4100f-ab74-43c2-9911-b367629950e9
Williams, Michelle A
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Stoner, Lee
0f9dd581-205f-490d-8879-7ba7cfa51450

Castro, Nicholas, Zieff, Gabriel, Bates, Lauren C, Pagan Lassalle, Patricia, Higgins, Simon, Faulkner, James, Lark, Sally, Skidmore, Paula, Hamlin, Michael J, Signal, T Leigh, Williams, Michelle A and Stoner, Lee (2023) A cross-sectional investigation of preadolescent cardiometabolic health: associations with fitness, physical activity, sedentary behavior, nutrition, and sleep. Children, 10 (2), [336]. (doi:10.3390/children10020336).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiometabolic disease (CMD) risk often begins early in life. Healthy lifestyle behaviors can mitigate risk, but the optimal combination of behaviors has not been determined. This cross-sectional study simultaneously examined the associations between lifestyle factors (fitness, activity behaviors, and dietary patterns) and CMD risk in preadolescent children.

METHODS: 1480 New Zealand children aged 8-10 years were recruited. Participants included 316 preadolescents (50% female, age: 9.5 ± 1.1 years, BMI: 17.9 ± 3.3 kg/m 2). Fitness (cardiorespiratory fitness [CRF], muscular fitness), activity behaviors (physical activity, sedentary, sleep), and dietary patterns were measured. Factor analysis was used to derive a CMD risk score from 13 variables (adiposity, peripheral and central hemodynamics, glycemic control, and blood lipids).

RESULTS: Only CRF (β = -0.45, p < 0.001) and sedentary time (β = 0.12, p = 0.019) were associated with the CMD risk score in the adjusted multivariable analysis. CRF was found to be nonlinear (VO 2 max ≤ ≈42 mL/kg/min associated with higher CMD risk score), and thus a CRF polynomial term was added, which was also associated (β = 0.19, p < 0.001) with the CMD risk score. Significant associations were not found with sleep or dietary variables.

CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that increasing CRF and decreasing sedentary behavior may be important public health targets in preadolescent children.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 February 2023
Published date: 9 February 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496647
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496647
ISSN: 2227-9067
PURE UUID: 35c93cbe-33bd-473f-b34c-df7e5fc00ef0
ORCID for James Faulkner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3704-6737

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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2025 18:45
Last modified: 07 Aug 2025 02:18

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Contributors

Author: Nicholas Castro
Author: Gabriel Zieff
Author: Lauren C Bates
Author: Patricia Pagan Lassalle
Author: Simon Higgins
Author: James Faulkner ORCID iD
Author: Sally Lark
Author: Paula Skidmore
Author: Michael J Hamlin
Author: T Leigh Signal
Author: Michelle A Williams
Author: Lee Stoner

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