Holme Ingar, Tonstad Serena, Sogaard Anne Johanne, Larsen Per G Lund, Haheim Lise Lund
Centre of Preventive Medicine, Ullevål University Hospital, 0407 Oslo, Norway.
BMC Public Health. 2007 Jul 12;7:154. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-7-154.
Data are scarce on the long term relationship between leisure time physical activity, smoking and development of metabolic syndrome and diabetes. We wanted to investigate the relationship between leisure time physical activity and smoking measured in middle age and the occurrence of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in men that participated in two cardiovascular screenings of the Oslo Study 28 years apart.
Men residing in Oslo and born in 1923-32 (n = 16 209) were screened for cardiovascular diseases and risk factors in 1972/3. Of the original cohort, those who also lived in same area in 2000 were invited to a repeat screening examination, attended by 6 410 men. The metabolic syndrome was defined according to a modification of the National Cholesterol Education Program criteria. Leisure time physical activity, smoking, educational attendance and the presence of diabetes were self-reported.
Leisure time physical activity decreased between the first and second screening and tracked only moderately between the two time points (Spearman's rho = 0.25). Leisure time physical activity adjusted for age and educational attendance was a significant predictor of both the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in 2000 (odds ratio for moderately vigorous versus sedentary/light activity was 0.65 [95% CI, 0.54-0.80] for the metabolic syndrome and 0.68 [0.52-0.91] for diabetes) (test for trend P < 0.05). However, when adjusted for more factors measured in 1972/3 including glucose, triglycerides, body mass index, treated hypertension and systolic blood pressure these associations were markedly attenuated. Smoking was associated with the metabolic syndrome but not with diabetes in 2000.
Physical activity during leisure recorded in middle age prior to the current waves of obesity and diabetes had an independent predictive association with the presence of the metabolic syndrome but not significantly so with diabetes 28 years later in life, when the subjects were elderly.
关于休闲时间体力活动、吸烟与代谢综合征及糖尿病发生之间的长期关系,数据较为匮乏。我们想要研究中年时期测量的休闲时间体力活动和吸烟情况与参与相隔28年的奥斯陆研究两次心血管筛查的男性中代谢综合征及糖尿病发生之间的关系。
1972/1973年对居住在奥斯陆且出生于1923 - 1932年的男性(n = 16209)进行了心血管疾病及危险因素筛查。在最初的队列中,2000年仍居住在同一地区的人受邀参加重复筛查,6410名男性参加了此次筛查。代谢综合征根据美国国家胆固醇教育计划标准的修订版进行定义。休闲时间体力活动、吸烟、受教育程度及糖尿病患病情况均通过自我报告获取。
在第一次和第二次筛查期间,休闲时间体力活动减少,且在两个时间点之间的追踪关联性仅为中等程度(斯皮尔曼等级相关系数ρ = 0.25)。校正年龄和受教育程度后的休闲时间体力活动是2000年代谢综合征和糖尿病的显著预测因素(对于代谢综合征,中度剧烈活动与久坐/轻度活动相比的比值比为0.65 [95%置信区间,0.54 - 0.80],对于糖尿病为0.68 [0.52 - 0.91])(趋势检验P < 0.05)。然而,当校正1972/1973年测量的更多因素,包括血糖、甘油三酯、体重指数、治疗过的高血压和收缩压后,这些关联明显减弱。吸烟与2000年的代谢综合征相关,但与糖尿病无关。
在当前肥胖和糖尿病流行之前的中年时期记录的休闲时间体力活动,与代谢综合征的存在具有独立的预测关联,但在28年后受试者步入老年时,与糖尿病的关联并不显著。