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Metabolic syndrome and quality of life (QOL) using generalised and obesity-specific QOL scales

Authors
Han, J. H.Park, H. S.Shin, C. I.Chang, H. M.Yun, K. E.Cho, S. H.Choi, E. Y.Lee, S. Y.Kim, J. H.Sung, H. N.Kim, J. H.Choi, S. I.Yoon, Y. S.Lee, E. S.Song, H. R.Bae, S. C.
Issue Date
May-2009
Publisher
WILEY
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE, v.63, no.5, pp 735 - 741
Pages
7
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE
Volume
63
Number
5
Start Page
735
End Page
741
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/23204
DOI
10.1111/j.1742-1241.2009.02021.x
ISSN
1368-5031
1742-1241
Abstract
We investigated the association between metabolic syndrome (MS) and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) assessed using generalised and obesity-specific QOL instruments. We recruited 456 outpatients [age: 19-81 years, body mass index (BMI): 16.3-36.7 kg/m(2)] in the primary care division from 12 general hospitals in Korea. HRQOL was measured using EuroQol comprising the health states descriptive system (EQ-5D) and visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS) as a general instrument. The Korean Obesity-related QOL scale (KOQOL) composed of six domains was used as a disease-specific QOL instrument. MS was defined on the basis of International Diabetes Federation (IDF) criteria with Korean-specific waist circumference cutoffs (men: 90 cm, women: 85 cm). Subjects with MS displayed significantly higher impairment of EQ-5D and KOQOL. Binary logistic regression analysis of MS patients with controls for age, gender, smoking, alcohol, exercise, education, income, marital status and medication history disclosed odds ratio (OR) values of 2.13 (1.33-3.41) for impaired total KOQOL, 2.07 (1.31-3.27) for impaired physical health, 1.63 (1.03-2.60) for impaired work-related health, 2.42 (1.45-4.04) for impaired routine life, 2.08 (1.27-3.40) for impaired sexual life and 2.56 (1.59-4.11) for diet distress. Among the EQ-5D dimensions, only pain/discomfort displayed a significantly increased OR of 1.60 (1.01-2.56) in MS group. Subjects with MS displayed a significantly impaired HRQOL compared with those without MS. MS and HRQOL were more strongly associated in obesity-specific QOL than in generalised QOL.
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의과대학 (의학부(임상-서울))
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