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Television viewing time and inflammatory-related mortality

journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 08:45 authored by Megan Grace, Francis Dillon, Elizabeth Barr, Neville Owen, David Dunstan
Purpose: Television (TV) viewing time is associated with increased risk of all-cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality. Although TV time is detrimentally associated with key inflammatory markers, the associations of TV time with other inflammatory-related mortality (with a predominant inflammatory, oxidative or infectious component, but not attributable to cancer or cardiovascular causes), are unknown. Methods Among 8933 Australian adults (4593 never-smokers) from the baseline (1999-2000) Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study (median follow-up, 13.6 yr), we examined TV time in relation to noninflammatory and inflammatory-related mortality (not attributable to cancer or cardiovascular causes, hereafter "inflammatory-related" mortality). Because smoking has a significant inflammatory component, we also examined this relationship in never-smokers. Results Of 896 deaths, 248 were attributable to cardiovascular disease, 346 to cancer, 130 to other inflammatory-related causes (71 for never-smokers), and 172 to noninflammatory-related causes (87 for never-smokers). After multivariate adjustment for age, sex, education, household income, smoking status, alcohol intake, energy intake, diet, and cardiometabolic risk biomarkers (model 3), every additional hours per day of TV time was associated with increased risk of inflammatory-related mortality in the overall population (hazard ratio, 1.12; 95% confidence interval, 1.00-1.25) and in never-smokers (1.18; 1.00, 1.40). These results were attenuated after additional adjustment for leisure-time physical activity. After multivariate adjustment (model 3), no association was observed for noninflammatory mortality in the overall population (0.95; 0.85, 1.07), but risk tended to decrease for never-smokers (0.85; 0.75, 1.02). Conclusions In summary, before adjustment for leisure-time physical activity, TV time was associated with increased risk of inflammatory-r

Funding

The population-health science of sedentary behaviour: an integrated approach to understanding environments, prolonged sitting and adverse health outcomes

National Health and Medical Research Council

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Too Much Sitting â Developing New Approaches to Chronic Disease Prevention

National Health and Medical Research Council

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A five year follow-up of people with Type 2 diabetes & other states of glucose intolerance and associated risk factors

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001317
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 01959131

Journal

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

Volume

49

Issue

10

Start page

2040

End page

2047

Total pages

8

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 American College of Sports Medicine

Former Identifier

2006080950

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-01-24

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