Title Evaluation of Physical Fitness, Body Composition, and Adherence to Mediterranean Diet in Adolescents from Estonia: The AdolesHealth Study
Authors GALÁN LÓPEZ, PABLO, Dominguez, Raul , Pihu, Maret , Gisladottir, Thordis , Sanchez-Oliver, Antonio J. , Ries, Francis
External publication Si
Means Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
Scope Article
Nature Científica
JCR Quartile 1
SJR Quartile 2
JCR Impact 2.84900
SJR Impact 0.73900
Publication date 01/11/2019
ISI 000502057400176
DOI 10.3390/ijerph16224479
Abstract Unhealthy lifestyles, low levels of physical fitness, and adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MD) are associated with bad quality of life and the development of a wide range of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). The current study aimed to evaluate the level of adherence to the MD in physical fitness performance and body composition parameters in children and adolescents of Estonia. Therefore, 413 adolescents (56% boys) from the city of Tartu completed the Mediterranean Diet Questionnaire (KIDMED) for analyzing the adherence to MD and performed the Alpha Fitness Test for measuring physical fitness and body composition. A 41.67% of low, 44.05% of average, and 14.28% of high adherence to MD was detected, without difference between genders (p = 0.747). In the Alpha Fitness battery, a higher performance was observed in all tests for boys vs. girls (p < 0.05). In relation to body composition, higher height, weight, and waist values were observed in boys (p < 0.05) and a lower body fat percentage (p < 0.01) without differences in body mass index (BMI; p = 0.906). The adherence to the MD is classified as average/low. Gender significantly influences all variables of the Alpha Fitness battery and anthropometrics measures excepting BMI. According the levels of adherence to the MD, no statistically different prevalence was observed for Non-Overweight (N-O-weight), Non-Overfat (N-O-fat), or Non-Overwaist (N-O-waist). Still, a risk factor for Overweight (O-weight) in boys with low adherence was observed in comparison to those with a mid-level of adherence to the MD.
Keywords adolescents; obesity; nutrition; sedentary; physical inactivity; lifestyle; cardiovascular risk factors; body composition
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