Nutrients (Apr 2023)

Relationship of the Behavior of Older Participants with Body Composition Change: Results of the Second Wave of the Cognition of Older People, Education, Recreational Activities, Nutrition, Comorbidities, and Functional Capacity Studies (COPERNICUS)

  • Agnieszka Kujawska,
  • Guillermo F. López Sánchez,
  • Flaka Hoti,
  • Sławomir Kujawski,
  • Paweł Zalewski,
  • Kornelia Kędziora-Kornatowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15081834
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. 1834

Abstract

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Background: To examine the relationship between the frequency of physical activities and food product consumption with body composition change after two years in a sample of older people. Methods: Body composition, mass change, frequency of physical activity, and food products consumption were measured. Depression severity, health self-assessment, cognitive function, and demographic data were included as confounders. Results: There were no significant changes in body composition except for a reduction in visceral fat level within two years (p p p p = 0.029). Subjects who ate sweets once a week or more frequently consumed coffee more often. Conclusions: More frequent drinking of beer or of green or white tea and consumption of sweets were related to an increase in body fat percentage, while daily coffee consumption was related to a decrease in body fat percentage after two years in older, healthy subjects. Noteworthily, the frequencies of food product consumption are interrelated.

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