Viktoria Svensson
Karolinska Institutet
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Featured researches published by Viktoria Svensson.
International Journal of Obesity | 2011
Viktoria Svensson; Josefin A. Jacobsson; Robert Fredriksson; Pernilla Danielsson; Tanja Sobko; Helgi B. Schiöth; Claude Marcus
Objective:To explore the relationship between severity of obesity at age 7 and age 15, age at onset of obesity, and parental body mass index (BMI) in obese children and adolescents.Design:Longitudinal cohort study.Subjects:Obese children (n=231) and their parents (n=462) from the Swedish National Childhood Obesity Centre.Methods:Multivariate regression analyses were applied with severity of obesity (BMI standard deviation score (BMI SDS)) and onset of obesity as dependent variables. The effect of parental BMI was evaluated and in the final models adjusted for gender, parental education, age at onset of obesity, severity of obesity at age 7 and obesity treatment.Results:For severity of obesity at age 7, a positive correlation with maternal BMI was indicated (P=0.05). Severity of obesity at this age also showed a strong negative correlation with the age at onset of obesity. Severity of obesity at age 15 was significantly correlated with both maternal and paternal BMI (P<0.01). In addition, BMI SDS at age 15 differed by gender (higher for boys) and was positively correlated with severity of obesity at age 7 and negatively correlated with treatment. Also, a negative correlation was indicated at this age for parental education. No correlation with age at onset was found at age 15. For age at onset of obesity there was no relevant correlation with parental BMI. Children within the highest tertile of the BMI SDS range were more likely to have two obese parents.Conclusion:The impact of parental BMI on the severity of obesity in children is strengthened as the child grows into adolescence, whereas the age at onset is probably of less importance than previously thought. The influence of parental relative weight primarily affects the severity of childhood obesity and not the timing.
Obesity Facts | 2012
Pernilla Danielsson; Viktoria Svensson; Jan Kowalski; Gisela Nyberg; Örjan Ekblom; Claude Marcus
Objective: To assess whether first year weight loss, age, and socioeconomic background correlate with the success rate of continuous long-term behavioral obesity treatment. Methods: In a 3-year longitudinal study, obese children (n = 684) were divided into three groups based on age at the start of treatment, age 6–9 years, 10–13 years, and 14–16 years. Results: The mean BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS) decline was age-dependent (p = 0.001), independently of adjustment for missing data: –1.8 BMI-SDS units in the youngest, –1.3 in the middle age group, and –0.5 in the oldest age group. SES and parental BMI status did not affect the results. 30% of the adolescents remained in treatment at year 3. There was only a weak correlation between BMI-SDS change after 1 and 3 years: r = 0.51 (p < 0.001). Among children with no BMI-SDS reduction during year 1 (n = 46), 40% had a clinically significantly reduced BMI-SDS after year 3. Conclusion: Behavioral treatment should be initiated at an early age to increase the chance for good results. Childhood obesity treatment should be continued for at least 3 years, regardless of the initial change in BMI-SDS.
BMC Public Health | 2011
Tanja Sobko; Viktoria Svensson; Anna Ek; Mirjam Ekstedt; Håkan Karlsson; Elin Johansson; Yingting Cao; Maria Hagströmer; Claude Marcus
BackgroundOverweight and obesity have a dramatic negative impact on childrens health not only during the childhood but also throughout the adult life. Preventing the development of obesity in children is therefore a world-wide health priority. There is an obvious urge for sustainable and evidenced-based interventions that are suitable for families with young children, especially for families with overweight or obese parents. We have developed a prevention program, Early STOPP, combating multiple obesity-promoting behaviors such unbalanced diet, physical inactivity and disturbed sleeping patterns. We also aim to evaluate the effectiveness of the early childhood obesity prevention in a well-characterized population of overweight or obese parents. This protocol outlines methods for the recruitment phase of the study.Design and methodsThis randomized controlled trial (RCT) targets overweight and/or obese parents with infants, recruited from the Child Health Care Centers (CHCC) within the Stockholm area. The intervention starts when infants are one year of age and continues until they are six and is regularly delivered by a trained coach (dietitian, physiotherapist or a nurse). The key aspects of Early STOPP family intervention are based on Swedish recommendations for CHCC, which include advices on healthy food choices and eating patterns, increasing physical activity/reducing sedentary behavior and regulating sleeping patterns.DiscussionThe Early STOPP trial design addresses weaknesses of previous research by recruiting from a well-characterized population, defining a feasible, theory-based intervention and assessing multiple measurements to validate and interpret the program effectiveness. The early years hold promise as a time in which obesity prevention may be most effective. To our knowledge, this longitudinal RCT is the first attempt to demonstrate whether an early, long-term, targeted health promotion program focusing on healthy eating, physical activity/reduced sedentary behaviors and normalizing sleeping patterns could be effective. If proven so, Early STOPP may protect children from the development of overweight and obesity.Trial registrationThe protocol for this study is registered with the clinical trials registry clinicaltrials.gov, ID: ES-2010)
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2015
Elin Johansson; Maria Hagströmer; Viktoria Svensson; Anna Ek; Michaela Forssén; Håkan Nero; Claude Marcus
BackgroundThe aim was to describe levels, patterns and correlates of physical activity and sedentary behavior in a sample of Swedish children, two years of age, with normal weight, overweight and obese parents.MethodsData from 123 children, 37 with normal-weight parents and 86 with overweight/obese parents, enrolled in the Early Stockholm Obesity Prevention Project study was used. Children wore an Actigraph GT3X+ accelerometer for seven days. Average activity (counts per minute), number of steps and time spent in low and high-intensity physical activity and in sedentary was assessed. Differences between weekdays and weekend days were examined as were correlations with sex, body mass index (BMI), motor skills and family-related factors.ResultsChildren were active at high intensity 11% of the day. On average 55% of the day was spent being sedentary. Number of steps and time in low-intensity physical activity differed between weekdays and weekend days: on weekdays, 363 more steps (p = 0.01) and six more minutes in low physical activity (p = 0.04). No differences were found for any physical activity or sedentary behavior variable by sex, BMI, motor skills or any family-related variable (p = 0.07 – 0.95).ConclusionsTwo-year-old children have an intermittent activity pattern, that is almost similar on weekdays and they spend about half of the daytime active. The absence of any association with sex, BMI, motor skills or parental factors indicates that the individual variation in this age group is primarily due to endogenous factors.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov: NCT01198847.
Acta Paediatrica | 2014
Viktoria Svensson; Anna Ek; Mikaela Forssen; Kerstin Ekbom; Yingting Cao; Mojgan Ebrahim; Elin Johansson; Håkan Nero; Maria Hagströmer; Miriam Ekstedt; Paulina Nowicka; Claude Marcus
To explore the simultaneous impact of parental adiposity and education level on infant growth from birth to 12 months, adjusting for known early‐life risk factors for subsequent childhood obesity.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Elin Johansson; Hong Mei; Lijuan Xiu; Viktoria Svensson; Yueling Xiong; Claude Marcus; Jianduan Zhang; Maria Hagströmer
Understanding about socio-cultural differences in physical activity in children with high and low risk for obesity can help tailor intervention programs in different settings. This study aimed to compare objectively measured physical activity in two-year-olds and their parents, living in Stockholm, Sweden, and Wuhan, China. Data from Early STOPP was used. Children and parents wore an accelerometer in connection with the child’s second birthday. Weekly and hourly patterns were examined. Correlation between child and parental physical activity was assessed. Data on 146 Swedish and 79 Chinese children and their parents was available. Children, mothers and fathers in Stockholm were significantly more active than their counterparts in Wuhan (children; 2989 (SD 702) vs. 1997 (SD 899) counts per minute (CPM), mothers 2625 (SD 752) vs. 2042 (SD 821) CPM; fathers 2233 (SD 749) vs. 1588 (SD 754) CPM). Activity levels were similar over a week for children and parents within both countries. No parental-child correlations, except for a paternal-son correlation in Stockholm, were found. Children, mothers and fathers in Stockholm are more active compared with their counterparts in Wuhan. Interventions to increase physical activity needs to take cultural aspects into account, also when targeting very young children.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Viktoria Svensson; Emilia Johansson; M. Fischer; S. L. Deng; Maria Hagströmer; P. Danielsson
It was hypothesized that supplementation of omega-3 fatty acids could increase physical activity (PA) levels, where traditional interventions often fail. The aim of this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trail was to evaluate the effects of 15-week administration of omega-3 fatty acids on objectively measured PA and relative body weight in 8–9 year-old children. The children were randomly assigned to supplementation of omega-3 fatty acids or placebo. Primary outcome was change in PA counts per minute (cpm), and secondly change in body mass index standard deviation score (BMI SDS). Covariance models were applied adjusting for age, gender, weight status, PA and intervention season. Compliance was controlled for by analyzing fatty acid composition in plasma. The intention to treat population consisted of 362 children (omega-3 n = 177, placebo n = 185). No significant effects of omega-3 fatty acids on PA or relative body weight were observed. In covariance models no effects were observed by gender, weight status or change in PA (all p > 0.05), but inactive children increased their PA more than children classified as active at baseline (p < 0.05).
Acta Paediatrica | 2017
Mirjam Ekstedt; Mojgan Haji Seyed Ebrahim Darkeh; Lijuan Xiu; Michaela Forssén; Elin Johansson; Anna Ek; Viktoria Svensson; Kerstin Ekbom; Claude Marcus
Parental obesity is the predominant risk factor for child obesity. We compared sleep in one‐year‐old children with different obesity risks, based on parental weight, and explored associations with weight, parental sleep and family factors.
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2011
Viktoria Svensson; Linda Lundborg; Yingting Cao; Paulina Nowicka; Claude Marcus; Tanja Sobko
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2012
Yingting Cao; Viktoria Svensson; Claude Marcus; Jing Zhang; Jianduan Zhang; Tanja Sobko