Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2013 Jan;37(1):86-93. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2012.86. Epub 2012 Jun 12.
No study has documented how symptomatic morbidity varies across the body mass index (BMI) spectrum (underweight, normal weight, overweight and obese) or across the entire child and adolescent age range.
To (1) quantify physical and psychosocial morbidities experienced by 2-18-year-olds according to BMI status and (2) explore morbidity patterns by age.
DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional data from two Australian population studies (the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children and the Health of Young Victorians Study) were collected during 2000-2006. Participants were grouped into five age bands: 2-3 (n=4606), 4-5 (n=4983), 6-7 (n=4464), 8-12 (n=1541) and 13-18 (n=928) years.
Outcomes-Parent- and self-reported global health; physical, psychosocial and mental health; special health-care needs; wheeze; asthma and sleep problems. Exposure-measured BMI (kg m(-2)) categorised using standard international cutpoints.
The variation in comorbidities across BMI categories within and between age bands was examined using linear and logistic regression models.
Comorbidities varied with BMI category for all except sleep problems, generally showing the highest levels for the obese category. However, patterns differed markedly between age groups. In particular, poorer global health and special health-care needs were associated with underweight in young children, but obesity in older children. Prevalence of poorer physical health varied little by BMI in 2-5-year-olds, but from 6 to 7 years was increasingly associated with obesity. Normal-weight children tended to experience the best psychosocial and mental health, with little evidence that the U-shaped associations of these variables with BMI status varied by age. Wheeze and asthma increased slightly with BMI at all ages.
Deviation from normal weight is associated with health differences in children and adolescents that vary by morbidity and age. As well as lowering risks for later disease, promoting normal body weight appears central to improving the health and well-being of the young.
目前尚无研究记录身体质量指数(BMI)谱(体重过轻、正常体重、超重和肥胖)或整个儿童和青少年年龄段的症状发病率变化情况。
(1)根据 BMI 状况量化 2-18 岁儿童的身体和心理社会发病率;(2)探讨年龄相关的发病模式。
设计、地点和参与者:本研究采用 2000-2006 年澳大利亚两项人群研究(澳大利亚儿童纵向研究和年轻维多利亚人的健康研究)的横断面数据。参与者被分为五个年龄组:2-3 岁(n=4606)、4-5 岁(n=4983)、6-7 岁(n=4464)、8-12 岁(n=1541)和 13-18 岁(n=928)岁。
家长和自我报告的整体健康;身体、心理社会和心理健康;特殊保健需求;喘息;哮喘和睡眠问题。使用国际标准切点测量的 BMI(kg/m2)进行暴露分类。
采用线性和逻辑回归模型分析 BMI 类别内和类别间的共病变化。
除睡眠问题外,所有共病均与 BMI 类别有关,肥胖组的发病率最高。然而,不同年龄组的发病模式明显不同。在幼儿中,与体重不足相关的较差的整体健康和特殊保健需求,而在大龄儿童中与肥胖相关。在 2-5 岁儿童中,BMI 与较差的身体健康的相关性变化不大,但从 6 岁到 7 岁,肥胖与较差的身体健康的相关性逐渐增加。正常体重儿童的心理社会和心理健康状况往往较好,BMI 状况与这些变量之间的 U 型关联随年龄变化的证据很少。喘息和哮喘在所有年龄段均随 BMI 增加而略有增加。
与正常体重相比,儿童和青少年的体重偏差与发病率不同,且发病率与年龄有关。除了降低日后患病的风险外,促进正常体重似乎是改善年轻人健康和幸福感的核心。