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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Associations between cardiorespiratory fitness, motor competence, and adiposity in children
Anssi VanhalaAnssi VanhalaJuuso VäistöNiina LintuTuomo TompuriYing GaoYing GaoEero A. HaapalaEero A. HaapalaTaija FinniTimo A. Lakkasubject
GerontologyobesityBODY-COMPOSITIONPOWERPhysical activityCHILDHOODEXERCISEOverweight03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinechildrenmedicine030212 general & internal medicineCompetence (human resources)Motor skillOVERWEIGHTmotor skillsCardiorespiratory fitness030229 sport sciencesX-RAY ABSORPTIOMETRYmedicine.diseaseObesity3142 Public health care science environmental and occupational healthfitnessPHYSICAL-ACTIVITYYOUTHX-Ray Absorptiometrymedicine.symptomPsychologyKTKdescription
We investigated the associations of motor competence (MC) with peak oxygen uptake (V.O-2peak), peak power output (W-max), and body fat percentage (BF%) and whether measures of cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) modify the associations between MC and BF%. Altogether, 35 children (aged 7-11 years) in the CHIPASE Study and 297 in PANIC Study (aged 9-11 years) participated in the study. MC was assessed using KTK and modified Eurofit tests. V.O-2peak and W-max were measured by maximal exercise test on a cycle ergometer and scaled by lean mass (LM) or body mass (BM). BF% was assessed either by bioimpedance (CHIPASE) or DXA (PANIC). MC was not associated with V.O-2peak/LM (standardized regression coefficient beta = 0.073-0.188, P > .083). V.O-2peak/BM and W-max/LM and BM were positively associated with MC (beta = 0.158-0.610, P .381), was inversely associated with BF%. Furthermore, the associations of MC with BF% were not modified by CRF. These results suggest that the positive associations between MC and CRF scaled by BM are a function of adiposity and not peak aerobic power and that CRF is not modifying factor in the associations of MC and BF%. Peer reviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-09-28 |