Japas Claudio, Knutsen Synnøve, Dehom Salem, Dos Santos Hildemar, Tonstad Serena
Department of Health Promotion and Education, School of Public Health, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA 92350, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics & Population Medicine, School of Public Health, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA 92350, United States.
Obes Res Clin Pract. 2014 Nov-Dec;8(6):e549-57. doi: 10.1016/j.orcp.2013.11.007. Epub 2013 Dec 22.
Obesity increases risk of premature disease, and may be associated with unfavorable lifestyle changes that add to risk. This study analyzed the association of midlife BMI change with current lifestyle patterns among multiethnic men.
Men aged 40-60 years (n=9864) retrospectively reported body weight between ages 20-40 years and current dietary, TV, physical activity and sleep practices in the Adventist Health Study II, a study of church-goers in the US and Canada. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, odds ratios for BMI gain were calculated for each lifestyle practice controlling for sociodemographic and other lifestyle factors and current BMI.
Men with median or higher BMI gain (2.79 kg/m(2)) between ages 20-40 years were more likely to consume a non-vegetarian diet, and engage in excessive TV watching and little physical activity and had a shorter sleep duration compared to men with BMI gain below the median (all p<0.001). In multivariate logistic analysis current BMI was significantly associated with all lifestyle factors (all p≤0.005). BMI gain was associated with lower odds of vegetarian diet (odds ratio [OR] 0.939; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.921-0.957) and of physical activity ≥150 min/week (OR 0.979, 95% CI 0.960-0.999).
These findings imply that diet and less physical activity are associated with both gained and attained BMI, while inactivity (TV watching) and short sleep duration correlated only with attained BMI. Unhealthy lifestyle may add risk to that associated with BMI. Longitudinal and intervention studies are needed to infer causal relationships.
肥胖会增加过早患病的风险,并且可能与增加风险的不良生活方式改变有关。本研究分析了中年时期体重指数(BMI)变化与多民族男性当前生活方式模式之间的关联。
年龄在40 - 60岁的男性(n = 9864)回顾性报告了他们20 - 40岁之间的体重以及当前的饮食、看电视、身体活动和睡眠习惯,该研究来自基督复临安息日会健康研究II,这是一项针对美国和加拿大常去教堂者的研究。在多因素逻辑回归分析中,针对每种生活方式习惯计算BMI增加的比值比,同时控制社会人口学因素和其他生活方式因素以及当前的BMI。
20 - 40岁期间BMI增加处于中位数或更高水平(2.79kg/m²)的男性,与BMI增加低于中位数的男性相比,更有可能食用非素食饮食、过度看电视、身体活动较少且睡眠时间较短(所有p < 0.001)。在多因素逻辑分析中,当前BMI与所有生活方式因素均显著相关(所有p≤0.005)。BMI增加与素食饮食的较低几率(比值比[OR] 0.939;95%置信区间[CI] 0.921 - 0.957)以及每周身体活动≥150分钟的较低几率(OR 0.979,95% CI 0.960 - 0.999)相关。
这些发现表明,饮食和较少的身体活动与增加的BMI以及已达到的BMI均有关联,而不活动(看电视)和较短的睡眠时间仅与已达到的BMI相关。不健康的生活方式可能会增加与BMI相关的风险。需要进行纵向研究和干预研究以推断因果关系。