Association Between Physical Activity and the Prevalence of Kidney Stones in American Adults: Results From a Multiyear National Survey - 20/07/24

Résumé |
Objective |
To investigate the association between physical activity (PA) and the prevalence of kidney stones.
Methods |
A cross-section study was conducted using data from National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007-2018. PA was evaluated based on the Global Physical Activity Questionnaire. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to elucidate the association between PA (patterns, intensity, duration, and frequency of moderate and vigorous PA) and the prevalence of kidney stones after adjusting for potential confounders. Stratified and interaction analyses were conducted to detect potential effect modifiers. In addition, PA was assessed using metabolic equivalent and physical volume, and followed the regression above. Water intake was obtained from the day 2 dietary recall and was included in the sensitivity analysis.
Results |
A total of 34,390 participants were included in the analysis. The multivariable logistic regression revealed that individuals who engaged in moderate PA for 30-60 minutes per day had a significant inverse association with the prevalence of kidney stones in the fully adjusted model (odds ratio=0.804, 95% confidence interval 0.700 to 0.923), while no more significant finding was observed for other PA parameters. Interaction and stratified analyses indicated no covariate modifying the association. The results above were robust in the sensitivity analysis.
Conclusion |
The duration of moderate PA (30-60 min/d) is inversely associated with the prevalence of kidney stones, while no more significant association was observed between other PA parameters (including patterns, intensity, duration, and frequency of vigorous PA, frequency of moderate PA) and kidney stones.
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| Funding Support: This work was supported by the Key Research and Development Projects of Sichuan Science and Technology Department (grant numbers: 2022YFS0306) and the project of Sichuan Provincial Health and Health Commission (grant number: 20PJ064). |
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| Yunfei Xiao and Jiahao Wang have contributed equally to this work. |
Vol 189
P. 9-18 - juillet 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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