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Table 3 Proportions of metabolic syndrome in analyses stratified by sex and physical activity

From: Association between the type of physical activity and metabolic syndrome in middle-aged and older adult residents of a semi-mountainous area in Japan

    

Metabolic syndromeb

 

Total

Case

Non-case

P

n

n

(%)

n

(%)

Men

269

123

(45.7)

146

(54.3)

 

Q1. Exercisea

  With

104

40

(38.5)

64

(61.5)

0.060

  Without

165

83

(50.3)

82

(49.7)

 

Q2. Daily physical activitya

  With

142

55

(38.7)

87

(61.3)

0.020

  Without

127

68

(53.5)

59

(46.5)

 

Physical activity type

  I-typea

112

63

(56.3)

49

(43.8)

0.033

  E-typea

15

5

(33.3)

10

(66.7)

 

  D-typea

53

20

(37.7)

33

(62.3)

 

  F-typea

89

35

(39.3)

54

(60.7)

 

Women

367

58

(15.8)

309

(84.2)

 

Q1. Exercisea

  With

121

18

(14.9)

103

(85.1)

0.764

  Without

246

40

(16.3)

206

(83.7)

 

Q2. Daily physical activitya

  With

173

16

(9.2)

157

(90.8)

0.001

  Without

194

42

(21.6)

152

(78.4)

 

Physical activity type

  I-typea

162

35

(21.6)

127

(78.4)d

0.005

  E-typea

32

7

(21.9)

25

(78.1)

 

  D-typea

84

5

(6.0)

79

(94.0)d

 

  F-typea

89

11

(12.4)

78

(87.6)

 
  1. aQ1. Exercise, and Q2. Daily physical activity, I-type, E-type, D-type, and F-type: see Table 1
  2. bMetabolic syndrome: case (metabolic syndrome and pre-metabolic syndrome), non-case (non-metabolic syndrome)
  3. cP-value of the metabolic syndrome in extended Fisher's exact test (all over test). Boldface indicates statistically significant differences
  4. dFisher's exact test for multiple comparisons: P < 0.001 between I-type and D-type