Screen time is independently associated with serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in youth with obesity — Gary S. Goldfield (2021) | RDL Network
Screen time is independently associated with serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in youth with obesity
Applied Physiology Nutrition and Metabolism 46(9): 1083-1090
Article 2021 English
Authors
GG
Gary S. Goldfield
JC
Jameason D. Cameron
RS
Ronald J. Sigal
Abstract
1 min read
Low levels of brain derived-neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and excessive screen exposure are risk factors for neurocognitive deficits and obesity in youth, but the relationship between screen time and BDNF remains unknown. This study examined whether duration and/or type of sedentary screen time behaviour (TV viewing, video games, recreational computer use) are associated with serum BDNF levels in youth with obesity. The sample consisted of 250 inactive, postpubertal adolescents with obesity (172 females/78 males, aged 15.5 ± 1.4 years) at the baseline assessment of the Healthy Eating, Aerobic, Resistance Training in Youth Study. After controlling for self-reported age, sex, race, parental education, puberty stage, physical activity, and diet, higher total screen exposure was significantly associated with lower serum BDNF levels (β = -0.21, p = 0.002). TV viewing was the only type of screen behaviour that was associated with BDNF levels (β = -0.22, p = 0.001). Higher exposure to traditional forms of screen time was independently associated with lower serum BDNF levels, and this association appears to be driven primarily by TV viewing. Future intervention research is needed to determine whether limiting screen time is an effective way to increase BDNF and associated health benefits in a high-risk population of youth with obesity. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov NCT00195858. Novelty: This study is the first to show that recreational screen time is inversely associated with serum BDNF levels. The inverse association between screen time and BDNF is driven primarily by TV viewing, indicating the type of screen might matter.
Anders Grøntved, Mathias Ried‐Larsen, Niels Christian Møller, Peter Lund Kristensen, Niels Wedderkopp, Karsten Froberg, Frank B Hu, Ulf Ekelund, Lars Bo Andersen
Daphne Margoni, Kelly Michalakakou, Eleni Angeli, Panagiota Pervanidou, Christina Kanaka‐Gantenbein, George Chrousos, Ioannis Papassotiriou, Elefthería Roma
Gary S. Goldfield, Glen P. Kenny, Stasia Hadjiyannakis, Penny Phillips, Angela S. Alberga, Travis J. Saunders, Mark S. Tremblay, Janine Malcolm, Denis Prud’homme, Réjeanne Gougeon, Ronald J. Sigal
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.