早期接触动物与儿童体重指数百分位数和百分比脂肪量。

Pamela L Ferguson, Sarah Commodore, Brian Neelon, JacKetta Cobbs, Anthony C Sciscione, William A Grobman, Roger B Newman, Alan T Tita, Michael P Nageotte, Kristy Palomares, Daniel W Skupski, John E Vena, Kelly J Hunt
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引用次数: 3

摘要

一些研究已经确定儿童时期动物暴露与肥胖有关,但结果不一致,时间也不同。方法:我们对4-8岁儿童进行了一项观察性队列研究,研究环境对儿童健康结局的影响[ECHO]。主要的暴露是在家中养狗和/或在出生后的第一年经常与农场动物接触。感兴趣的结果是儿童BMI百分位数(根据性别和年龄进行调整),分为正常/体重不足(第百分位数)、超重(第85至第85位)和肥胖(≥95位),以及脂肪量百分比(连续)。分别使用多项逻辑回归和多变量线性回归分析关联,有和没有多重imputation。结果:770名儿童中有245名(31.8%)第一年接触动物。在控制了以下协变量后,早期接触动物的儿童出现肥胖BMI类别的几率是接触动物儿童的0.53倍(95% CI: 0.28, 0.997):母亲孕前BMI、种族/民族、报告的儿童活动水平、接受食品援助、儿童开始日托的年龄(结论:这些结果提供了证据,表明在生命的第一年接触狗或农场动物与儿童时期较低的肥胖几率和较低的脂肪量有关。
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Early Exposure to Animals and Childhood Body Mass Index Percentile and Percentage Fat Mass.

Introduction: A few studies have identified childhood animal exposure as associated with adiposity, but results are inconsistent and differ in timing.

Methods: We conducted an observational cohort study of children ages 4-8 in the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes [ECHO] study. The main exposure was having a dog in the home and/or regular contact with farm animals during the first year of life. Outcomes of interest were child BMI percentile (adjusted for gender and age) categorized as normal/underweight (<85th percentile), overweight (85th to <95th), and obese (≥95th), and percent fat mass (continuous). Associations were analyzed using multinomial logistic regression and multivariable linear regression, respectively, with and without multiple imputation.

Results: First year animal exposure occurred in 245 of 770 (31.8%) children. Children with early animal exposure had 0.53 (95% CI: 0.28, 0.997) times the odds of being in the obese BMI category compared to those exposed to animals after controlling for covariates: maternal pre-pregnancy BMI, race/ethnicity, reported child activity level, receiving food assistance, age child began daycare (<1 year vs 1+), exclusively breastfed x6 months, and NICU admission (n=721). Children with early animal exposure had, on average, 1.5% (95% CI: -3.0, -0.1) less fat mass than exposed children after adjustment for maternal BMI, race/ethnicity, activity, food assistance, breastfeeding, and maternal education (n=548). Multiple imputation did not alter either result.

Conclusion: These results provide evidence that exposure to dogs or farm animals in the first year of life is associated with lower odds of obesity and lower percent fat mass in childhood.

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