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Edmonton Obesity Staging System for Pediatrics, Quality of Life, Fitness, Adherence to Exercise in Adolescents with Obesity

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Edmonton Obesity Staging System for Pediatrics, Quality of Life, Fitness, Adherence to Exercise in Adolescents with Obesity

Kakon, Gabriel (2018) Edmonton Obesity Staging System for Pediatrics, Quality of Life, Fitness, Adherence to Exercise in Adolescents with Obesity. Masters thesis, Concordia University.

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Abstract

Background: The Edmonton Obesity Staging System-pediatrics (EOSS-p) is based on the EOSS for adults, which has shown better predictive value for mortality than BMI. To our knowledge, no study has examined the EOSS-p in relation to health and wellbeing outcomes in a pediatric sample with obesity. The purpose of this study was to compare the associations of EOSS-p and BMI percentile with quality of life (QOL), cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), muscular strength, and adherence to an exercise intervention in adolescents with obesity.
Methods: Participants were enrolled in the Healthy Eating Aerobics Resistance Training in Youth trial (N= 299). QOL, CRF (peak oxygen uptake, VO2peak) and muscular strength were assessed by the Pediatric QOL Inventory (PedsQL), indirect calorimetry during a maximal treadmill test, and 8-RM bench and leg press tests respectively. QOL, CRF, and muscular strength were assessed at baseline and 6-months after the intervention. Adherence was determined as a percentage of attended exercise sessions. Participants were staged from 0 to 3 (absent to severe health risk) according to EOSS-p. The association of EOSS-p and BMI percentile with outcomes were assessed using general linear models adjusting for age and sex.
Results: Baseline QOL decreased with increasing EOSS-p stages (p<0.001). QOL was 75.7 +/- 11.4 in stage 0/1, 69.1 +/- 13.1 in stage 2, and 55.4 +/- 13.0 in stage 3. Stage 3 showed smaller improvements with 6-month CRF than stage 0/1 and 2 (p=0.001, B=-3.882 mlO2/kg/min). BMI percentile was associated with baseline VO2peak (p<0.001, B=-1.044 mlO2/kg/min), bench press (p=0.029, B=0.832 kg) and leg press (p=0.003, B=3.992 kg). Similar associations were observed between BMI percentile and 6-month outcomes.
Conclusion: As EOSS-p stages increase, QOL decreases. EOSS-p stage 3 had lower 6-month CRF, which suggests stage 3 may require a longer, more intensive or different intervention to achieve similar CRF improvements. BMI percentile showed contradicting health associations with cardiorespiratory fitness and muscular strength.

Divisions:Concordia University > Faculty of Arts and Science > Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology
Item Type:Thesis (Masters)
Authors:Kakon, Gabriel
Institution:Concordia University
Degree Name:M. Sc.
Program:Health and Exercise Science
Date:21 December 2018
Thesis Supervisor(s):Alberga, Angela
ID Code:985342
Deposited By: GABRIEL ALEXAND KAKON
Deposited On:23 Jun 2021 15:47
Last Modified:24 Jun 2021 01:01

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