AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore how body size indices like BMI, FFMI, FMI, and body fat percentage relate to physical activity levels in Japanese adult women.
  • A total of 100 women aged 31 to 69 were analyzed using accelerometers and the doubly-labelled water method to measure physical activity.
  • Results indicated that women with higher fat levels (FMI and %BF) showed lower physical activity, while those with larger BMI only had reduced energy expenditure per fat-free mass and body weight, suggesting the need to consider different body composition measures when discussing obesity and physical activity.

Article Abstract

The objective of the present study was to investigate the relationship between the indices of body size such as BMI, fat-free mass index (FFMI, FFM/height2), fat mass index (FMI, FM/height2), and body fat percentage (%BF), and physical activities assessed by the doubly-labelled water (DLW) method and an accelerometer in free-living Japanese adult women. We conducted a cross-sectional study in 100 female subjects ranging in age from 31 to 69 years. Subjects were classified in quartiles of BMI, FFMI, FMI and %BF. Daily walking steps and the duration of light to vigorous physical activity were simultaneously assessed by an accelerometer for the same period as the DLW experiment. Only physical activity-related energy expenditure (PAEE)/FFM and PAEE/body weight (BW) decreased in the highest quartile of BMI. Physical activity level, PAEE/FFM and PAEE/BW decreased in the highest quartile of FMI and %BF, whereas they were not different among quartiles of FFMI. Daily walking steps and the duration of moderate- and vigorous-intensity physical activities decreased or tended to decrease in the highest quartile of FMI and %BF, but did not differ among quartiles of FFMI and BMI. These results clearly showed that Japanese adult women with higher fat deposition obviously had a low level of physical activities assessed by both the DLW method and accelerometry, but those with larger BMI had lower PAEE/FFM and PAEE/BW only. Our data suggest that the relationship between obesity and daily physical activities should be discussed using not only BMI but also FMI or %BF.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114511001358DOI Listing

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