Association between impaired sensitivity to thyroid hormones and sedentary behavior: a cross-sectional study
Hangzhou Yang, Jie Kang, Lingkang Dong, Zihan Lin, Qixian Lin, Bo Wu

TL;DR
This study found a link between sedentary behavior and thyroid hormone sensitivity, with differences observed between men and women and influenced by race.
Contribution
The study reveals a positive association between sedentary time and impaired thyroid hormone sensitivity in men, partially mediated by BMI, and identifies a significant interaction effect of race.
Findings
Sedentary time was positively associated with impaired thyroid hormone sensitivity in men after adjusting for confounders.
BMI partially mediated the association between sedentary time and thyroid hormone sensitivity.
Race had a significant interaction effect on the relationship between sedentary time and thyroid hormone sensitivity.
Abstract
Sedentary behavior and impaired thyroid hormone sensitivity are linked to a variety of comorbid conditions; however, the exact nature of their relationship remains inadequately studied. This study sought to examine the association between sedentary time and thyroid hormone sensitivity. Utilizing a cross-sectional design, the study analyzed data from U.S. participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) conducted between 2007 and 2012. The Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) regression and the Boruta algorithm were employed to screen out confounding factors closely associated with sedentary time and the parametric thyroid feedback quantile-based index (PTFQI). Multivariate linear regression models were applied to analyze the association between sedentary time and indicators of thyroid hormone sensitivity. After adjusting for all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Physical Activity and Health · Eating Disorders and Behaviors
