Be
sure to stand up and move now and then!
From: ELSEVIER HEALTH
SCIENCES via EurekAlert.
Their results are published in the Journal of Hepatology.
Physical activity is known to reduce the incidence and
mortality of various chronic diseases. However, more than one half of the
average person's waking day involves sedentary activities associated with
prolonged sitting such as watching TV and using the computer and other
devices.
Recently, attention has focused on the damaging effects of
sedentary behavior regardless of additional physical activity.
This association
was still observed among patients participating in high levels of moderate to
vigorous physical activity, indicating that regular high levels of physical
activity do not fully protect against the risks associated with prolonged
periods of sedentary behaviors. However, the association between physical
activity and NAFLD has been largely unexplored.
In the current study researchers examined the association of
sitting time and physical activity level with NAFLD in Korean men and women to
explore whether any observed associations were related to the amount of body
fat.
They studied records of nearly 140,000 Koreans who underwent a health
examination between March 2011 and December 2013. Physical activity level and
sitting time were assessed using the Korean version of the international
Physical Activity Questionnaire Short Form. The presence of fatty liver was
determined using ultrasonography.
Of the people studied, nearly 40,000 had NAFLD. Importantly,
the researchers found that both prolonged sitting time and decreased physical
activity level were independently associated with increasing prevalence of
NAFLD. Remarkably, these associations were also observed in patients with a
body mass index (BMI) of less than 23.
Read more at EurekAlert.