Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.

The evidence regarding the unique effect of sedentary behaviour on obesity among children is unclear. Moreover, the effect of substituting sedentary behaviour with physical activity of different intensities on the body composition of children has received limited empirical study.To examine the mathe...

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Main Authors: Borja Del Pozo-Cruz, Nicholas Gant, Jesús Del Pozo-Cruz, Ralph Maddison
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5595318?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-80617ebfc55b4ae08859f2503381116f2020-11-25T00:24:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018447210.1371/journal.pone.0184472Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.Borja Del Pozo-CruzNicholas GantJesús Del Pozo-CruzRalph MaddisonThe evidence regarding the unique effect of sedentary behaviour on obesity among children is unclear. Moreover, the effect of substituting sedentary behaviour with physical activity of different intensities on the body composition of children has received limited empirical study.To examine the mathematical effects on Body Mass Index (BMI) of substituting sedentary behaviours with physical activities of different intensities on children and youth aged 5-14 years old in New Zealand.Secondary analysis of accelerometer data from the National Survey of Children and Young People's Physical Activity and Dietary Behaviours in New Zealand (2008/09) was conducted. A total of 1812 children and youth aged 5-24 years provided accelerometer-derived data on daily sedentary time (SB), light intensity physical activity (LPA) and moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Sleep time was assessed with a validated computerised use-of-time tool. BMI was assessed using anthropometric measurements. Multiple linear regression models were used to examine the independent associations of SB, Sleep time, LPA, and MVPA on BMI. The isotemporal substitution approach was used to ascertain the mathematical effect of substituting each of the other behaviours on BMI. Analyses were stratified by age groups.SB showed a unique (inverse) association with BMI across all age groups (p<0.05) but 20-24 years (p>0.05). Similarly, MVPA was positively associated (p<0.001) across all age groups. Among age groups 5-9 years, 10-14 years and 15-19 years, the estimated impact of replacing 60 min/day of SB with the same amount of MVPA time resulted in decreased BMI for all age groups (p<0.001), ranging from -1.26 (5-9 years) to -1.43 units (15-19 years). Similar results were achieved when SB was replaced with LPA or sleeping time for children (5-19 years). In young people (age group 20-24), the impact of replacing 30 min/day of SB with MVPA resulted in an estimated -1 BMI units decrease (p<0.001).MVPA and SB have a unique effect on BMI. Further, substituting SB with LPA or MVPA was associated with a favourable effect on BMI across all age groups; with MVPA having the strongest association.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5595318?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Borja Del Pozo-Cruz
Nicholas Gant
Jesús Del Pozo-Cruz
Ralph Maddison
spellingShingle Borja Del Pozo-Cruz
Nicholas Gant
Jesús Del Pozo-Cruz
Ralph Maddison
Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Borja Del Pozo-Cruz
Nicholas Gant
Jesús Del Pozo-Cruz
Ralph Maddison
author_sort Borja Del Pozo-Cruz
title Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.
title_short Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.
title_full Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.
title_fullStr Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young New Zealanders: An isotemporal substitution analysis.
title_sort relationships between sleep duration, physical activity and body mass index in young new zealanders: an isotemporal substitution analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The evidence regarding the unique effect of sedentary behaviour on obesity among children is unclear. Moreover, the effect of substituting sedentary behaviour with physical activity of different intensities on the body composition of children has received limited empirical study.To examine the mathematical effects on Body Mass Index (BMI) of substituting sedentary behaviours with physical activities of different intensities on children and youth aged 5-14 years old in New Zealand.Secondary analysis of accelerometer data from the National Survey of Children and Young People's Physical Activity and Dietary Behaviours in New Zealand (2008/09) was conducted. A total of 1812 children and youth aged 5-24 years provided accelerometer-derived data on daily sedentary time (SB), light intensity physical activity (LPA) and moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Sleep time was assessed with a validated computerised use-of-time tool. BMI was assessed using anthropometric measurements. Multiple linear regression models were used to examine the independent associations of SB, Sleep time, LPA, and MVPA on BMI. The isotemporal substitution approach was used to ascertain the mathematical effect of substituting each of the other behaviours on BMI. Analyses were stratified by age groups.SB showed a unique (inverse) association with BMI across all age groups (p<0.05) but 20-24 years (p>0.05). Similarly, MVPA was positively associated (p<0.001) across all age groups. Among age groups 5-9 years, 10-14 years and 15-19 years, the estimated impact of replacing 60 min/day of SB with the same amount of MVPA time resulted in decreased BMI for all age groups (p<0.001), ranging from -1.26 (5-9 years) to -1.43 units (15-19 years). Similar results were achieved when SB was replaced with LPA or sleeping time for children (5-19 years). In young people (age group 20-24), the impact of replacing 30 min/day of SB with MVPA resulted in an estimated -1 BMI units decrease (p<0.001).MVPA and SB have a unique effect on BMI. Further, substituting SB with LPA or MVPA was associated with a favourable effect on BMI across all age groups; with MVPA having the strongest association.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5595318?pdf=render
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