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Time spent in sedentary posture is associated with waist circumference and cardiovascular risk

Tigbe, WW; Granat, MH; Sattar, N; Lean, MEJ

Time spent in sedentary posture is associated with waist circumference and cardiovascular risk Thumbnail


Authors

WW Tigbe

N Sattar

MEJ Lean



Abstract

Background
The relationship between metabolic risk and time spent sitting, standing and stepping has not been well established. The present study aimed to determine associations of objectively measured time spent siting, standing and stepping, with coronary heart disease (CHD) risk.
Methods
A cross-sectional study of healthy non-smoking Glasgow postal workers, n=111 (55 office-workers, 5 women, and 56 walking/delivery-workers, 10 women), who wore activPAL physical activity monitors for seven days. Cardiovascular risks were assessed by metabolic syndrome categorisation and 10-y PROCAM risk.
Results
Mean(SD) age was 40(8) years, BMI 26.9(3.9)kg/m-2 and waist circumference 95.4(11.9)cm. Mean(SD) HDL-cholesterol 1.33(0.31), LDL-cholesterol 3.11(0.87), triglycerides 1.23(0.64)mmol/l and 10-y PROCAM risk 1.8(1.7)%. Participants spent mean(SD) 9.1(1.8)h/d sedentary, 7.6(1.2)h/d sleeping, 3.9(1.1)h/d standing and 3.3(0.9)h/d stepping, accumulating 14,708(4,984)steps/d in 61(25) sit-to-stand transitions per day. In univariate regressions - adjusting for age, sex, family history of CHD, shift worked, job type and socio-economic status - waist circumference (p=0.005), fasting triglycerides (p=0.002), HDL-cholesterol (p=0.001) and PROCAM-risk (p=0.047) were detrimentally associated with sedentary time. These associations remained significant after further adjustment for sleep, standing and stepping in stepwise regression models. However, after further adjustment for waist circumference, the associations were not significant. Compared to those without the metabolic syndrome, participants with the metabolic syndrome were significantly less active – fewer steps, shorter stepping duration and longer time sitting. Those with no metabolic syndrome features walked >15,000 steps/day, or spent >7h/day upright.
Conclusion
Longer time spent in sedentary posture is significantly associated with higher CHD risk and larger waist circumference.

Citation

Tigbe, W., Granat, M., Sattar, N., & Lean, M. (2017). Time spent in sedentary posture is associated with waist circumference and cardiovascular risk. International Journal of Obesity, 41, 689-696. https://doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2017.30

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 23, 2017
Online Publication Date Jan 31, 2017
Publication Date Jan 31, 2017
Deposit Date Jan 26, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jul 31, 2017
Journal International Journal of Obesity
Print ISSN 0307-0565
Electronic ISSN 1476-5497
Publisher Nature Publishing Group
Volume 41
Pages 689-696
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2017.30
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2017.30
Related Public URLs http://www.nature.com/ijo/index.html

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