AI Article Synopsis

  • Research examined the relationship between physical activity, depressiveness, and coping strategies in 50 patients with high-grade obesity who are preparing for bariatric surgery.
  • Activity thermogenesis (AT) was measured using a wearable device, while depressiveness and coping behaviors were assessed through standardized questionnaires.
  • Findings revealed that AT was inversely related to Body Mass Index (BMI) and that certain coping strategies like "support coping" and "active coping" negatively correlated with AT, but there was no significant correlation between AT and levels of depressiveness.

Article Abstract

Background: Reduced physical activity is supposed to be associated with depressiveness and more passive coping patterns. For further evaluation of this assumed relation we studied energy expenditure due to physical activity - usually referred to as activity thermogenesis (AT) - together with depressiveness (clinical diagnosis, depression module of the Patient Health Questionnaire), and coping behaviours (Brief COPE Inventory) in 50 patients with high-grade obesity (42 ± 12 years; 9 with II° and 41 with III° obesity) aiming at bariatric surgery.

Methods: AT was assessed with a portable armband device (SenseWear™ armband). Depressiveness and coping were assessed using validated questionnaires.

Results: Weight-adjusted non-exercise AT and intensity of physical activity (metabolic equivalent) correlated inversely with body mass index (non-exercise AT: r = -0.32, P < 0.05; mean metabolic equivalent: r = -0.37, P < 0.01) but not with depressiveness. The coping strategies "support coping" and "active coping" showed significant inverse correlations to a) weight-adjusted non-exercise AT ("support coping": r = -0.34, P < 0.05; "active coping": r = -0.36, P < 0.05), b) weight-adjusted exercise-related AT ("support coping": r = -0.36, P < 0.05; "active coping": r = -0.38, P < 0.01) and c) intensity of physical activity (for mean metabolic equivalent: "support coping": r = -0.38, P < 0.01; "active coping": r = -0.40, P < 0.01; for duration of exercise-related AT: "support coping": r = -0.36, P < 0.05; "active coping": r = -0.38, P < 0.01).

Conclusions: AT was not associated with depressiveness. Furthermore, supposed adaptive coping strategies of individuals aiming at bariatric surgery were negatively associated with AT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479107PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13030-015-0042-4DOI Listing

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