Cardiometabolic risk through an integrative classification combining physical activity and sedentary behavior in European adolescents: HELENA study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cristi-Montero, Carlos; Chillón Garzón, Palma; Ortega Porcel, Francisco Bartolomé; Ruiz Ruiz, JonatanEditorial
Elsevier BV
Materia
Accelerometry Cardiovascular disease Exercise Metabolic disease Sedentary lifestyles
Fecha
2018-03-27Referencia bibliográfica
Cristi-Montero C, Chillo´n P, Labayen I, Casajus JA, Gonzalez-Gross M, Vanhelst J, et al. Cardiometabolic risk through an integrative classification combining physical activity and sedentary behavior in European adolescents: HELENA study. J Sport Health Sci 2019;8:55 62.
Patrocinador
The HELENA project was supported by the European Community Sixth RTD Framework Programme (contract FOOD-CT-2005-007034). The data for this study were gathered under the auspices of the HELENA project, and further analysis was additionally supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Grants RYC-2010-05957 and RYC-2011-09011), the Spanish Ministry of Health: Maternal, Child Health and Development Network (Grants RD08/0072 and RD16/0022), the Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (MICINN-FEDER), and the University of Granada, Plan Propio de Investigación 2016, Excellence actions: Units of Excellence; Unit of Excellence on Exercise and Health (UCEES).Resumen
This study aims to compare adolescents’ cardiometabolic risk score through an integrative classification of physical activity (PA),
which involves the combination of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and sedentary behavior (SB). The cardiometabolic risk score was lower in adolescents meeting the MVPA recommendation and with less time spent in SB in comparison
to the high-SB & Inactive group (p < 0.05). However, no difference in cardiometabolic risk score was established between High-SB or
Low-SB groups in inactive adolescents. It is important to note that CRF was the only variable that showed a significant modification (higher)
when children were compared from the category of physically inactive with “active” but not from high- to low-SB. Being physically active is the most significant and protective outcome in adolescents to reduce cardiometabolic risk. Lower SB does
not exhibit a significant and extra beneficial difference.