| dc.description.abstract |
Background & objective:
A study was conducted to determine the effect of obesity on pulmonary
functions and to compare the same between obese and non obese students in the age
group of 18-25 years.
Material & methods:
A cross sectional study was conducted on obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) male
(n=32) and female (n=18) students aged 18-25 years and compared with age matched
non-obese (BMI 18.5–24.99 Kg/m2) male (n=23) and female subjects (n=27) as
control. Detailed anthropometric and physiological data were collected. Pulmonary
functions were recorded by using Computerized Spiro excel. Parameters recorded
were Forced Vital Capacity (FVC in ml), Forced Expiratory Volume in 1st sec (FEV1
in ml), FEV1 %, Peak Expiratory Flow Rate [PEFR in L/min was recorded by mini
Wright’s Peak flow meter] and Maximum Expiratory Pressure [MEP in mmHg was
recorded by Modified Black’s apparatus].
Statistical analysis was done by calculating MeanSD by using student’s t
test. Correlation between degree of obesity and pulmonary functions was done by
Pearson’s correlation
Results:
Systolic Blood Pressure, Diastolic Blood Pressure, Pulse Rate and Respiratory
Rate were significantly higher in obese students when compared to their respective
control. We observed highly significant reduction in PEFR (p<0.001) and MEP
IX
(p<0.001) in both obese male and female subjects compared to control. FEV1% was
significantly lower in obese female students.
In present study, FVC and FEV1 were negatively correlated with adiposity
markers (BMI, WC, WHR, WHtR, Body fat %). WC {FVC (r = -0.253, p< 0.01),
FEV1 (r = -0.236, p < 0.05)}, WHtR {FVC(r = -0.357, p< 0.001) and FEV1 (r =
0.319, p < 0.01)} were statistically significant with FVC. Significant negative
correlation of PEFR and MEP was observed with all adiposity markers.
Interpretation & conclusion:
The study concludes that all the respiratory parameters were significantly
reduced in obese subjects compared to non-obese subjects. Obesity and pattern of fat
distribution have independent effect on pulmonary function |
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