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BMC Pediatrics 2013
The relationship between physical activity, physical fitness and overweight in adolescents: a systematic review of studies published in or after 2000Keywords: Physical activity, Cardiorespiratory fitness, Motor fitness, Overweight, Obesity, Adolescent, Youth, Cross-sectional studies, Longitudinal studies Abstract: The electronic academic databases PubMed, SportDiscus, WEB OF KNOWLEDGE and Ovid were searched for studies on physical activity, fitness and overweight in adolescents aged 11 to 19 years (cross-sectional studies) and in adolescents up to 23 years old (longitudinal studies) published in English in or after 2000.Twelve cross-sectional and two longitudinal studies were included. Only four studies analyzed the interaction among physical activity, fitness and overweight in adolescents and reported inconsistent results. All other studies analyzed the relationship between either physical activity and overweight, or between fitness and overweight. Overweight—here including obesity—was inversely related to physical activity. Similarly, all studies reported inverse relations between physical fitness and overweight. Mediator and moderator effects were detected in the interrelationship of BMI, fitness and physical activity. Overall, a distinction of excessive body weight as cause or effect of low levels of physical activity and fitness is lacking.The small number of studies on the interrelationship of BMI, fitness and physical activity emphasizes the need for longitudinal studies that would reveal 1) the causality between physical activity and overweight / fitness and overweight and 2) the causal interrelationships among overweight, physical activity and fitness. These results must be carefully interpreted given the lack of distinction between self-reported and objective physical activity and that studies analyzing the metabolic syndrome or cardiovascular disease were not considered. The importance of physical activity or fitness in predicting overweight remains unknown.Overweight and obesity has been called a global epidemic by the World Health Organization [1]. The prevalence of overweight and obesity is especially dramatic in economically developed countries [2] and not only in adults but also in children and adolescents. In Germany for instance, 17% of adolescents aged 14 t
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