Dissimilar impact of Mediterranean diet and physical activity on estimated body composition: A cross-sectional study from the ILERVAS project

Author

Sánchez Pérez, Marta

Sánchez Peña, Enric

Hernández García, Marta

González, Jessica

Purroy Garcia, Francisco

Rius, Ferran

Pamplona Gras, Reinald

Farràs-Sallés, Cristina

Gutiérrez Carrasquilla, Liliana

Fernández i Giráldez, Elvira

Bermúdez López, Marcelino

Salvador, Javier

Salas-Salvadó, Jordi

Lecube Torelló, Albert

Publication date

2020-01-27T08:21:32Z

2020-01-27T08:21:32Z

2019-06-17

2020-01-27T08:21:32Z



Abstract

There is a close relationship between lifestyle behaviors and excess adiposity. Althoughbody mass index (BMI) is the most used approach to estimate excess weight, other anthropometricindices have been developed to measure total body and abdominal adiposity. However, littleis known about the impact of physical activity and adherence to a Mediterranean diet on theseindices. Here we report the results of a cross-sectional study with 6672 middle-aged subjects withlow to moderate cardiovascular risk from the Ilerda Vascular (ILERVAS) project. The participants’adherence to physical activity (International Physical Activity Questionnaire short form) and MedDiet(Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener) was evaluated. Measures of total adiposity (BMI, ClínicaUniversidad de Navarra-Body Adiposity Estimator (CUN-BAE), and Deurenberg’s formula), centraladiposity (waist and neck circumferences, conicity index, waist to height ratio, Bonora’s equation,A body adiposity index, and body roundness index), and lean body mass (Hume formula) were assessed. Irrespective of sex, lower indices of physical activity were associated with higher valuesof total body fat and central adiposity. This result was constant regardless of the indices used toestimate adiposity. However, the association between MedDiet and obesity indices was much lessmarked and more dependent on sex than that observed for physical activity. Lean body mass wasinfluenced by neither physical activity nor MedDiet adherence. No joint effect between physicalactivity and MedDiet to lower estimated total or central adiposity indices was shown. In conclusion,physical activity is related to lower obesity indices in a large cohort of middle-aged subjects. MedDietshowed a slight impact on estimated anthropometric indices, with no joint effect when consideringboth lifestyle variables. ClinTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03228459.


This study was partially supported by grants from theDiputacióde Lleida, Generalitat de Catalunya (2017SGR696 and SLT0021600250). CIBER de Diabetes y Enfermedades Metabólicas Asociadas, CIBER de Nutricióny Obesidad, and CIBER de Enfermedades Respiratorias are initiatives of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Adiposity; Body fat; Mediterranean diet; Obesity indices; Physical activity; Questionnaire

Publisher

MDPI

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11061359

Nutrients, 2019, vol. 11, núm. 6: e1359, p. 1-14

Rights

cc-by (c) Sánchez, Marta et al., 2019

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

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