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A Systematic Review of the Associations of Adiposity and Cardiorespiratory Fitness With Arterial Structure and Function in Nonclinical Children and Adolescents. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to investigate how body fat (adiposity) and cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) relate to the structure and function of arteries in children and teens aged 5-17.9 years.
  • - Researchers reviewed 99 studies, mainly showing inconsistent or non-significant results regarding the impact of body fat on arterial health, though some suggested that higher abdominal fat may lead to worse arterial outcomes.
  • - The findings highlight a lack of strong evidence about the relationship between CRF and arterial health, recommending future research to further explore these connections, especially in youth with different body fat and fitness levels.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To summarize the evidence on associations of adiposity and cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) with arterial structure and function in nonclinical children and adolescents.

Methods: Two researchers conducted a search in 5 electronic databases in April 2022 to find studies in nonclinical youth (age 5-17.9 y) reporting multivariable associations. Studies were eligible if adiposity and/or CRF were used as the predictor and arterial structure and/or function was the outcome. The Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies was used to assess methodological quality for experimental studies, and a modified version was used for observational studies.

Results: Ninety-nine studies (72.7% cross-sectional) were included. Ninety-four assessed associations between adiposity and arterial outcomes, most using overall body proportion (n = 71), abdominal (n = 52), or whole-body adiposity (n = 40). Most evidence was inconsistent or nonsignificant, but 59 studies suggested higher abdominal adiposity and worse body proportion were associated with adverse arterial outcomes. Twenty-one assessed associations between CRF and arterial outcomes, with findings inconsistent. Most evidence was rated weak in quality.

Conclusion: While high adiposity may contribute to poor arterial outcomes, evidence is limited regarding CRF. Future studies should disentangle these associations by studying youth with healthy adiposity but poor CRF, or vice versa, using longitudinal or experimental study designs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/pes.2022-0029DOI Listing

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