Peak oxygen uptake cut-points to identify children at increased cardiometabolic risk : The PANIC Study
Agbaje, A. O., Haapala, E., Lintu, N., Viitasalo, A., Barker, A. R., Takken, T., Tompuri, T., Lindi, V., & Lakka, T. A. (2019). Peak oxygen uptake cut-points to identify children at increased cardiometabolic risk : The PANIC Study. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports, 29(1), 16-24. https://doi.org/10.1111/sms.13307
Authors
Date
2019Copyright
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
We aimed to develop cut
-points for directly measured peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak
) to
identify boys and girls at increased cardiometabolic risk using different scaling methods to
control for body size and composition. Altogether 352 children (186 boys, 166 girls) aged 9
–
11 years were included in the analyses. We measured VO2peak directly during a maximal cycle
ergometer exercise test and lean body mass (LM) by bioelectrical impedance. We computed a
sex
- and age
-specific cardiometabolic risk score (CRS) by summing important
cardiometabolic risk factors and defined increased cardiometabolic risk as >1 standard
deviation above the mean of CRS. Receiver operating characteristics curves
were used to
detect
O2peak cut
-points for increased cardiometabolic risk. Boys with
VO2peak <45.8 mL
·kg
body mass (BM)
-
1
·min
-
1
(95% confidence interval [CI]
= 45.1 to 54.6,
area under the curve
[AU
C
]
= 0.86, p<0.001) and <63.2 mL
·kg
L
M
-
1
·min
-
1
(95% CI
= 52.4 to 67.5, AUC
= 0.65,
p=0.006) had an increased CRS. Girls with
VO2peak <44.1 mL
·kg BM
-
1
·min
-
1
(95% CI
= 44.0
to 58.6, AUC
= 0.67, p=0.013) had an increased CRS.
2peak scaled by BM
-0.49 and LM
-0.77
derived from log
-linear allometric modelling poorly predicted increased cardiometabolic risk
in boys and girls. In conclusion, directly measured
VO2peak
<45.8 mL
·kg BM
-
1
·min
-
1
among
boys and
<44.1 mL·kg BM
-
1
·min
-1 among girls were cut
-points to identify those at increased
cardiometabolic risk
. Appropriately controlling for body size and composition reduced the
ability of cardiorespiratory fitness to identify children at increased cardiometabolic risk.
...
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.ISSN Search the Publication Forum
0905-7188Keywords
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