Improving multidisciplinary management of patients living with obesity: The evaluation of seated bioimpedance measures and relationship to functional performance following targeted intervention

Author:

Ryan Elizabeth12,MacLaughlin Helen234,Hay Robin23,Cawte Andrea23,Naumann Leonie1,Woodruff Gemma25,Cottrell Michelle1,Window Peter16

Affiliation:

1. Physiotherapy Department Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

2. Tertiary Obesity Multidisciplinary Service Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

3. Nutrition Research Collaborative Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

4. Queensland University of Technology School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences Brisbane Queensland Australia

5. Pharmacy Department Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

6. STARS Education and Research Alliance, Surgical Treatment and Rehabilitation Service Metro North Health and University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

Abstract

SummaryManagement of obesity requires a multidisciplinary approach including physical activity interventions, which have significant impacts on overall health outcomes. Greater levels of lean muscle mass are significantly associated with improved health and reduced risk of comorbidities and should be preserved where possible when undertaking rapid weight loss. This article reports on the physical and functional outcomes achieved during a 12‐week intensive multidisciplinary intervention targeting obesity and evaluates correlations between body composition and functional outcomes. We additionally aimed to investigate the test–retest reliability and levels of agreement in body composition measurements using bioimpedance spectroscopy between seated and standing positions. Of the 35 participants included in analysis, significant differences were observed between baseline and post‐intervention measures. These included weight loss of 12.6 kg, waist circumference reduction of 10.5 cm, fat mass reduction by 2.9%, muscle mass increase by 1.6%, 54.5 m improvement in the 6‐minute walk test and 3.8 rep improvement in the 30‐second sit‐to‐stand test. No significant correlations were observed between physical and functional outcome measures. Excellent test re‐test reliability was observed in bioimpedance spectroscopy seated measurements (ICC >.9). Significant differences were observed between seated and standing bioimpedance spectroscopy measurements, however they are regarded as small differences in a clinical setting.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference32 articles.

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2. The National Obesity Strategy 2022–2032.2022.

3. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Overweight and obesity.https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/australias-health/overweight-and-obesity

4. Role of Physical Activity for Weight Loss and Weight Maintenance

5. Association Between 6-Minute Walk Test and All-Cause Mortality, Coronary Heart Disease–Specific Mortality, and Incident Coronary Heart Disease

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