Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2909843 | Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome: Clinical Research & Reviews | 2015 | 6 Pages |
BackgroundNo study has been undertaken among rural adult population of India to investigate the association of cardiometabolic risk factors with TV watching.Materials and methodsThis cross-sectional study was carried out in 1007 participants (645 males and 362 females) aged 20–80 years from a rural community. Anthropometric measures were collected using standard techniques. HOMA-IR was calculated accordingly.ResultsThe significant higher value for MWC, WHtR, TER, SF4, BMI, %BF, FM, VFL, IVF, TC, LDL and FBG was observed with increasing duration of TV watching. No significant change was observed for TG, HDL, VLDL, DBP and MAP. Chi-square revealed significant difference for central obesity between male and females across TV watching category. The higher metabolic syndrome phenotypes were prevalent among both sexes with increasing duration of TV watching. Furthermore, multiple regression analyses (stepwise) revealed that occupation, monthly income, duration of TV watching in a day, education and monthly expenditure cumulatively explained ∼19% (R2 = 0.191) of the total variance of % body fat in the study.ConclusionIt seems rational to argue that lengthy TV watching time might have detrimental effect on CVD health.