Contrasting longitudinal and cross-sectional relationships between insulin resistance and percentage of body fat, fitness, and physical activity in children-the LOOK study.
Pediatr Diabetes. 2009 Dec; 10(8):500-7.PD

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Knowledge of individual changes in insulin resistance (IR) and longitudinal relationships of IR with lifestyle-associated factors are of important practical significance, but little longitudinal data exist in asymptomatic children. We aimed to determine (a) changes in the homeostatic model of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) over a 2-yr period and (b) comparisons of longitudinal and cross-sectional relationships between HOMA-IR and lifestyle-related risk factors.

METHODS

Our subjects, 241 boys and 257 girls, were assessed at age 8.1 yr (SD 0.35) and again 2 yr later for fasting blood glucose and insulin, dual X-ray absorptiometry-assessed percentage of body fat (%BF), pedometer-assessed physical activity (PA), and cardio-respiratory fitness (CRF) by multistage running test.

RESULTS

HOMA-IR was initially 9% greater in girls than boys and 27% greater 2 yr later. There was no evidence of longitudinal relationships between HOMA-IR and %BF in boys or girls, despite significant cross-sectional relationships (p < 0.001). In boys, there was evidence of a longitudinal relationship between HOMA-IR and both PA (p < 0.001) and CRF (p = 0.05). In girls, we found a cross-sectional relationship between HOMA-IR and CRF (p < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS

HOMA-IR increases between 8 and 10 yr of age and to a greater extent in girls. Longitudinal, unlike cross-sectional, relationships do not support the premise that body fat has any impact on HOMA-IR during this period or that PA or CRF changes affect HOMA-IR in girls. These data draw attention to difficulties in interpreting observational studies in young children.

Links

Publisher Full Text
Aggregator Full Text

Authors+Show Affiliations

Telford RD
Medical School, Australian National University and Commonwealth Institute, Canberra, ACT, Australia. rtelford@cominst.org.au
Cunningham RB
No affiliation info available
Shaw JE
No affiliation info available
Dunstan DW
No affiliation info available
Lafferty AR
No affiliation info available
Reynolds GJ
No affiliation info available
Hickman PE
No affiliation info available
Southcott E
No affiliation info available
Potter JM
No affiliation info available
Waring P
No affiliation info available
Telford RM
No affiliation info available

MeSH

Adipose TissueAustralasiaChildCross-Sectional StudiesDiabetes Mellitus, Type 2FemaleHomeostasisHumansInsulin ResistanceLife StyleLongitudinal StudiesMaleMetabolic SyndromeMotor ActivityObesityPhysical FitnessRisk Factors

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19460124