Low Physical Activity and Its Association with Diabetes and Other Cardiovascular Risk Factors: A Nationwide, Population-Based Study

Author

Brugnara, Laura

Murillo, Serafín

Novials, Anna

Rojo-Martínez, Gemma

Soriguer, Federico

Goday Arnó, Albert

Calle Pascual, Alfonso L.

Castaño, Luis

Gaztambide, Sonia

Valdés, Sergio

Franch Nadal, Josep

Castell, Conxa

Vendrell, Joan

Casamitjana i Abellà, Roser

Bosch Comas, Anna

Bordiú, Elena

Carmena, Rafael

Catalá, Miguel

Delgado, Elías

Girbés Borrás, Juan Adrián

López-Alba, Alfonso

Martínez-Larrad, Maria Teresa

Menéndez, Edelmiro

Mora-Peces, Inmaculada

Pascual-Manich, Gemma

Serrano-Ríos, Manuel

Gomis, Ramon, 1946-

Ortega Martínez de Victoria, Emilio

Publication date

2016-11-09T09:48:19Z

2016-11-09T09:48:19Z

2016-08-17

2016-11-09T09:48:24Z

Abstract

Low physical activity (PA), or sedentary lifestyle, is associated with the development of several chronic diseases. We aimed to investigate current prevalence of sedentariness and its association with diabetes and other cardiovascular risk factors. PA was evaluated in a population-based, cross-sectional, randomly sampled study conducted in 2009-2010 in Spain. International Physical Activity Questionnaire (SF-IPAQ) was used to assess PA. 4991 individuals (median age 50 years, 57% women) were studied. Prevalence of sedentariness was 32.3% for men and 39% for women (p < 0.0001). Sex differences were particularly notable (age*sex interaction, p = 0.0024) at early and older ages. Sedentary individuals had higher BMI (28 vs. 27 kg/m2) and obesity prevalence (37 vs. 26%). Low PA was present in 44, 43, and 38% of individuals with known diabetes (KDM), prediabetes/unknown-diabetes (PREDM/UKDM), and normal glucose regulation (p = 0.0014), respectively. No difference between KDM and PREDM/UKDM (p = 0.72) was found. Variables independently associated (p < 0.05) with sedentariness were age, sex, BMI, central obesity, Mediterranean diet adherence, smoking habit, HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides and dyslipidemia. Low PA is on the rise in Spain, especially among women. Sedentariness is associated with several cardiovascular risk factors and may be responsible for the increasing prevalence of obesity and diabetes in this country.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Condició física; Diabetis; Obesitat; Malalties cardiovasculars; Metabolisme dels lípids; Espanya; Qüestionaris; Physical fitness; Diabetes; Obesity; Cardiovascular diseases; Lipid metabolism; Spain; Questionnaires

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160959

PLoS One, 2016, vol. 11, num. 8, p. e0160959

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160959

Rights

cc-by (c) Brugnara, Laura et al., 2016

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