Int J Sports Med 2002; 23(S1): 15-21
DOI: 10.1055/s-2002-28456
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Increases in Physical Fitness During Childhood Improve Cardiovascular Health During Adolescence: The Muscatine Study

K.  F.  Janz1, 4 , J.  D.  Dawson2 , L.  T.  Mahoney3, 4
  • 1Department of Health, Leisure, and Sport Studies
  • 2Department of Biostatistics
  • 3Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Cardiology
  • 4Department of Epidemiology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA
Further Information

Publication History





Publication Date:
13 May 2002 (online)

Abstract

Longitudinal studies from childhood through adolescence have the potential of defining maturational changes in cardiovascular risk factors and may provide insight into the prediction of future cardiovascular disease. We assessed aerobic fitness, muscular strength, vigorous and sedentary activity, maturation, blood pressure, lipids, and body composition in 125 healthy children for a period of five years (mean baseline age, 10.5 years). All subjects were in pre- or early-puberty at baseline. After adjusting for age and gender and considering the confounding effects of growth and maturation, we examined whether changes in fitness and activity during the first four years of our study could predict cardiovascular health outcomes at year-five of our study. Change in muscular strength explained 4 % of the variability in year-five systolic blood pressure. Change in aerobic fitness explained 11 % of year-five total cholesterol to high density lipoprotein ratio and 5 % of year-five low density lipoprotein cholesterol. Changes in aerobic fitness and muscular strength explained 15 % of the variability in year-five adiposity and 15 % of the variability in year-five abdominal adiposity. Childhood health promotion programs that specifically target increases in physical fitness may help to reduce the increasing prevalence of adolescent obesity.

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K. F. Janz

Department of Health, Leisure, and Sport Studies · 102 FH · University of Iowa

Iowa City · IA 52242 · USA ·

Phone: +1 (319) 335 9345

Fax: +1 (319) 335 6669

Email: kathleen-janz@uiowa.edu

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