Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics in the School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA.
Pediatrics. 2012 Oct;130(4):e936-42. doi: 10.1542/peds.2012-0605. Epub 2012 Sep 10.
Variation in energy intake by weight status at different ages may explain inconsistencies in previous research on energy intake and obesity. Therefore, our objective was to determine the relationship between reported daily energy intake and categorized weight status across childhood.
We examined dietary reports of children ages 1 to 17 years by using the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2001-2008 (N = 12648). Using measured height and weight, we categorized weight status based on weight-for-length percentile (age <2 years) or BMI percentile (ages 2-17 years) using current recommendations. Dietary intake was reported by using the repeatedly validated automated multiple pass method, a detailed 2-day 24-hour recall. We used ordinary least squares regression to examine the interactions of age and weight category on total energy intake, controlling for gender, race, ethnicity, and income.
Weight status and age both have positive associations with self-reported energy intake. However, the interaction between weight and age demonstrates a negative effect throughout childhood, such that young obese/overweight children reported consuming significantly more calories and obese/overweight adolescents reported consuming fewer calories than their same-age healthy-weight peers.
In a nationally representative cross-sectional sample, overweight and obese girls older than 7 years and boys older than 10 years reported consuming fewer daily calories than their healthy-weight peers. One explanation for this would be that increased energy intake in early childhood is related to the onset of obesity, but other mechanisms, such as differences in energy expenditure, may contribute more to maintaining obese/overweight status through adolescence.
体重状态不同年龄段的能量摄入变化可能解释了之前关于能量摄入和肥胖的研究结果不一致。因此,我们的目的是确定儿童时期报告的每日能量摄入与分类体重状态之间的关系。
我们使用了 2001-2008 年国家健康和营养调查(NHANES)的数据(N=12648),检查了 1 至 17 岁儿童的饮食报告。根据目前的建议,使用测量的身高和体重,我们根据体重-身长百分位数(年龄<2 岁)或 BMI 百分位数(年龄 2-17 岁)对体重状态进行分类。饮食摄入量通过经过反复验证的自动多次通过法(一种详细的 2 天 24 小时回忆法)报告。我们使用普通最小二乘法回归来检查年龄和体重类别对总能量摄入的交互作用,同时控制性别、种族、民族和收入。
体重状态和年龄都与自我报告的能量摄入呈正相关。然而,体重和年龄之间的相互作用在整个儿童期表现出负效应,即年轻的肥胖/超重儿童报告摄入的卡路里明显更多,而肥胖/超重青少年报告摄入的卡路里比同龄健康体重的同龄人少。
在一个具有全国代表性的横断面样本中,年龄大于 7 岁的超重和肥胖女孩以及年龄大于 10 岁的超重和肥胖男孩报告的每日卡路里摄入量比健康体重的同龄人少。对此的一种解释是,儿童早期的能量摄入增加与肥胖的发生有关,但其他机制,如能量消耗的差异,可能通过青春期对维持肥胖/超重状态的贡献更大。