City
Epaper

Less active babies have higher obesity risk: Study

By IANS | Published: January 19, 2020 4:23 PM

Parents, please take note. Researchers have revealed that less active infants may accumulate more fat, which in turn may put them at risk for obesity later in life.

Open in App

For the study, published in the journal Obesity, researchers tracked the physical activity levels of 506 infants using small ankle-worn accelerometers for four days per tracking period at ages 3, 6, 9, and 12 months.

For each tracking period after 3, average physical activity increased by about four per cent, in line with infants becoming generally more mobile and active over the course of their first year.

Among infants, higher physical activity measured by the accelerometer was associated with lower central adiposity, a measure of lower-torso fat accumulation, the study said.

"This is the first study to demonstrate an association over time between higher levels of objectively measured physical activity and lower central adiposity in infancy," said study lead author Sara Benjamin-Neelon from Johns Hopkins University in US.

The study was part of a larger study of infant growth and obesity, called the Nurture study, which covered 666 mothers and their infants from the greater Durham, North Carolina, area during 2013 to 2016.

Of this group, the research team were able to get adequate accelerometer data for 506 infants.

"Some evidence suggests that the earlier you can get infants crawling and walking, and providing them with opportunities to move freely throughout the day, the more you can help protect them against later obesity," Benjamin-Neelon said.

The study found that among the infants in the study, an increase in recorded activity by one "standard deviation"essentially a standard proportion of the range of the datawas associated with a small but significant decrease in central adiposity.

The researcher noted that larger, longer-term studies will be necessary to determine the sustained effect of infant physical activity, but that preventing extended periods of inactivity for infants will almost certainly be good for them.

"These days, infants are spending more and more sedentary time in car seats, high chairs, strollersand perhaps we haven't thought enough about the developmental ramifications of these types of restrictive devices," Benjamin-Neelon concluded.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Johns Hopkins UniversityIansusDurham
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS: 12-Year-Old Boy Receives World's First Commercially Approved Gene Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

Social ViralTornado in US: Dashcam Records Terrifying Video of Cyclonic Storm Devastating Warehouse in Nebraska

InternationalDog Attack in US: Police Officer Shoots at Pack of Pit Bulls as They Maul Man in Philadelphia; Disturbing Video Goes Viral

National‘Unwarranted, Unsubstantiated Claims’: India on the Washington Post Report Identifying RAW Official in Pannun Assassination Case

InternationalUS Shooting: Three Police Officers Shot Dead in Charlotte, North Carolina

National Realted Stories

NationalGoa records 72.52 pc voter turnout

NationalPolitical slugfest surfaces in Bengal after SC puts interim stay on cancellation of 25,753 school jobs

NationalLok Sabha Elections 2024: Phase 3 Sees 61.45% Voter Turnout, Assam Tops with 75.26%

NationalDelhi unit Congress leader hit by vehicle during morning walk, dies

NationalStop providing safe haven to criminal & secessionist elements: India tells Canada