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Deleterious associations of sitting time and television viewing time with cardiometabolic risk biomarkers - Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle (AusDiab) study 2004-2005

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posted on 2024-07-26, 13:46 authored by Alicia A. Thorp, Genevieve N. Healy, Neville OwenNeville Owen, Jo Salmon, Kylie Ball, Jonathan E. Shaw, Paul Z. Zimmet, David W. Dunstan
OBJECTIVE - We examined the associations of sitting time and television (TV) viewing time with continuously measured biomarkers of cardio-metabolic risk in Australian adults. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS - Waist circumference, BM1, resting blood pressure, triglycerides, FIDL cholesterol, fasting and 2-h postload plasma glucose, and fasting insulin were measured in 2,761 women and 2,103 men aged >= 30 years (mean age 54 years) without clinically diagnosed diabetes from the 2004-2005 Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle (AusDiab) study. Multivariate linear regression analyses examined associations of self-reported sitting time and TV viewing time (hours per day) with these biornarkers, adjusting for potential confounding variables. RESULTS - For both women and men, sitting time was detrimentally associated with waist circumference, BM1, systolic blood pressure, fasting triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, 2-h postload plasma glucose, and fasting insulin (all P < 0.05), but not with fasting plasma glucose and diastolic blood pressure (men only). With the exception of FIDL cholesterol and systolic blood pressure in women, the associations remained significant after further adjustment for waist circumference. TV viewing time was detrimentally associated with all metabolic measures in women and all except FIDL cholesterol and blood pressure in men. Only fasting insulin and glucose (men only) remained deleteriously associated with TV viewing time after adjustment for waist circumference. CONCLUSIONS - in women and men, sitting time and TV viewing time were deleteriously associated with cardio-metabolic risk biomarkers, with sitting time having more consistent associations in both sexes and being independent of central adiposity. Preventive initiatives aimed at reducing sitting time should focus on both nonleisure and leisure-time domains.

Funding

A five year follow-up of people with Type 2 diabetes & other states of glucose intolerance and associated risk factors

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

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PDF (Published version)

ISSN

0149-5992

Journal title

Diabetes Care

Volume

33

Issue

2

Pagination

7 pp

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2010 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.

Language

eng

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