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Research Paper Details

January 28th, 2011
Andrea Bankoski, Tamara B Harris, James J McClain, Robert J Brychta, Paolo Caserotti, Kong Y Chen, David Berrigan, Richard P Troiano, Annemarie Koster
21 articles
10.2337/dc10-0987
Paper Abstract

This study examined the association between objectively measured sedentary activity and metabolic syndrome among older adults.

Data were from 1,367 men and women, aged u2265 60 years who participated in the 2003-2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Sedentary time during waking hours was measured by an accelerometer (<100 counts per minute). a sedentary bout was defined as period of time>5 min. A sedentary break was defined as an interruption in sedentary time (u2265 100 counts per minute). Metabolic syndrome was defined according to the Adult Treatment Panel (ATP) III criteria.

On average, people spent 9.5 h (65% of wear time) as sedentary. Compared with people without metabolic syndrome, people with metabolic syndrome spent a greater percentage of time as sedentary (67.3 vs. 62.2%), had longer average sedentary bouts (17.7 vs. 16.7 min), had lower intensity during sedentary time (14.8 vs. 15.8 average counts per minute), and had fewer sedentary breaks (82.3 vs. 86.7), adjusted for age and sex (all P < 0.01). A higher percentage of time sedentary and fewer sedentary breaks were associated with a significantly greater likelihood of metabolic syndrome after adjustment for age, sex, ethnicity, education, alcohol consumption, smoking, BMI, diabetes, heart disease, and physical activity. The association between intensity during sedentary time and metabolic syndrome was borderline significant.

The proportion of sedentary time was strongly related to metabolic risk, independent of physical activity. Current results suggest older people may benefit from reducing total sedentary time and avoiding prolonged periods of sedentary time by increasing the number of breaks during sedentary time.

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After being affected by seborrheic dermatitis, I have made it my goal to gather and organize all the information that has helped me in my journey.

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