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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Genetic and Environmental Effects on the Individual Variation and Continuity of Participation in Diverse Physical Activities

Jaakko KaprioKarri SilventoinenSara KaartinenTellervo KorhonenSari AaltonenUrho M. Kujala

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AdultMalesex differencesAdolescentlongitudinalympäristötekijätLeisure timesukupuolierotTwinsphysical activityPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationBiologyheritabilityliikuntaAffect (psychology)sukupuoli03 medical and health sciencesLeisure Activities0302 clinical medicinenuoretSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansOrthopedics and Sports Medicinebehavior geneticsLongitudinal StudiesRegistriesExerciseFinlandperinnöllisyys030304 developmental biologykaksostutkimus0303 health sciencesexercise030229 sport sciencestwinsHeritabilityLate adolescenceTwin studyConfidence intervalkaksosetVariation (linguistics)TraitFemaleGene-Environment Interactiongeneettiset tekijätvapaa-aikafyysinen aktiivisuusDemography

description

INTRODUCTION Participation in diverse physical activities has beneficial health effects. However, little is known on how genetic and environmental factors affect this trait. Thus, we examined to what extent these factors explain participation in diverse leisure-time physical activities from late adolescence to adulthood using a twin study design. METHODS The participants were Finnish twins who reported their participation in diverse leisure-time physical activities at ages 17 (n = 5429) and 34 yr (n = 4246). The number of physical activities engaged in was analyzed using applications of structural linear modeling for twin data. RESULTS On average, the total number of physical activities engaged in during leisure time was slightly over three at both ages and in both sexes, with moderate heritability estimates (40%-58%) from adolescence to adulthood. Environmental factors shared by co-twins (e.g., childhood family environment) influenced only in adolescence, being higher for women. Environmental influences unique to each co-twin explained the remaining variances (34%-57%), being higher at age 34 yr. Participation in diverse leisure-time physical activities correlated moderately between ages 17 and 34 yr (men: rtrait = 0.30, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.25-0.35; women: rtrait = 0.26, 95% CI = 0.22-0.31). In addition, genetic influences on participation in physical activities correlated moderately between adolescence and adulthood (rA = 0.51, 95% CI = 0.39-0.64, and 0.44, 95% CI = 0.34-0.55, respectively). These common genetic influences explained 93% of the trait correlations found in men and 85% in women. CONCLUSIONS Genetic and unique environmental influences explain a large proportion of variation in the number of leisure-time physical activities. However, the estimates vary by age and sex. Common genetic background mainly explains the continuity of the participation in diverse leisure-time physical activities between adolescence and adulthood.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202107264375