Abstract

BackgroundThe inverse association between physical activity and body fat percentage (%) varies among different populations. We aim to examine whether the significant association between them was uniform across the subpopulations after taking into account body mass index (BMI).MethodsOur study relied on data from China Health and Nutrition Surveys in 2015, including 5763 participants aged 40–64 years from 15 regions. Physical activity was calculated as metabolic equivalent task hours per day (MET·h/d). Body fat% was measured by bioelectrical impedance analysis. Body mass index < 24 kg/m2 was defined as normal weight and BMI ≥ 24 kg/m2 was overweight/obese. The effects of physical activity on body fat% were estimated using the Kruskal-Wallis test among sex, age, BMI groups, education, income, region and urbanization. Quantile regression analyses were utilized to describe the relationship between physical activity and body fat% distribution.ResultsOlder adults, overweight/obese, higher education, higher income, residents of central China and those living in areas of higher urbanization had the lower physical activity. Participants who engaged in the highest level of physical activity had 2.0 and 1.5% lower body fat% than the lowest level of physical activity group (23.4, 34.8%) for men and women, respectively. There were 10.4 and 8.8% of normal weight males and females called normal weight obese. Overall, 1 h extra 4.5 MET•h/d was significantly associated with 0.079 and 0.110% less total body fat% at the 75th and 90th percentiles in normal weight males, with 0.071% less at the 25th percentiles in overweight/obese males, with 0.046–0.098% less at the 25th to 90th percentiles in normal weight females, and with 0.035–0.037% less from the 50th to 90th percentiles in overweight/obese females. The inverse association between physical activity and total body fat% was stronger in normal weight obese participants than other subgroups.ConclusionsIn middle-aged Chinese adults, the inverse association between physical activity and body fat% was only in particular subpopulations rather than the entire population. We should pay much attention to normal weight obese and give a suitable physical activity guideline taking into account people with different body fat%.

Highlights

  • The inverse association between physical activity and body fat percentage (%) varies among different populations

  • We should pay much attention to normal weight obese and give a suitable physical activity guideline taking into account people with different body fat%

  • We tested for the interaction because we found that the relationship between Physical activity (PA) and BF% might be different for men/women and normal/overweight/obese at the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles (p < 0.0001)

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Summary

Introduction

The inverse association between physical activity and body fat percentage (%) varies among different populations. Body mass index (BMI) is regularly used as a robust measure of normal weight, overweight and obese due to its simplicity and the modest correlation with adiposity [6], and its use has been widely recommended in China [7]. The aims of this study are to (1) quantify the distribution of PA in a large cohort of middle-aged participants of 15 regions in China; (2) describe the distribution of total and trunk BF% at different levels of PA; (3) examine whether the significant association between PA and BF% is uniform across subpopulations after taking BMI into account

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