Accelerometer-measured physical activity and sedentary behavior in nonagenarians: Associations with self-reported physical activity, anthropometric, sociodemographic, health and cognitive characteristics
Aaltonen, Sari; Urjansson, Mia; Varjonen, Anni; Vähä-Ypyä, Henri; Iso-Markku, Paula; Kaartinen, Sara; Vasankari, Tommi; Kujala, Urho M.; Silventoinen, Karri; Kaprio, Jaakko; Vuoksimaa, Eero (2023)
Aaltonen, Sari
Urjansson, Mia
Varjonen, Anni
Vähä-Ypyä, Henri
Iso-Markku, Paula
Kaartinen, Sara
Vasankari, Tommi
Kujala, Urho M.
Silventoinen, Karri
Kaprio, Jaakko
Vuoksimaa, Eero
2023
PLoS ONE
e0294817
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-2023122011060
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-2023122011060
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
<p>BACKGROUND: Research on device-based physical activity in the oldest-old adults is scarce. We examined accelerometer-measured physical activity and sedentary behavior in nonagenarians. We also investigated how the accelerometer characteristics associate with nonagenarians' self-reported physical activity, anthropometric, sociodemographic, health and cognitive characteristics. METHODS: Nonagenarians from a population-based cohort study (N = 38, mean age 91.2) used accelerometers during the waking hours for seven days. They also participated in a health survey and cognitive telephone interview. The Wald test and Pearson and polyserial correlations were used to analyze the data. RESULTS: The participants' average day consisted of 2931 steps, 11 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and 13.6 hours of sedentary time. Physical activity bouts less than 3 minutes per day and sedentary time bouts of 20-60 minutes per day were the most common. No sex differences were found. Many accelerometer-measured and self-reported physical activity characteristics correlated positively (correlations ≥0.34, p-values <0.05). The low levels of many accelerometer-measured physical activity characteristics associated with low education (correlations ≥0.25, p-values <0.05), dizziness (correlations ≤-0.42, p-values <0.01) and fear of falling (correlations ≤-0.45, p-values <0.01). Fear of falling was also associated with accelerometer-measured sedentary behavior characteristics (correlations -0.42 or ≥0.43). CONCLUSIONS: Nonagenarians were mostly sedentary and low in physical activity, but individual variability existed. Accelerometer-measured and self-reported physical activity had a good consistency. Education, dizziness and fear of falling were consistently related to accelerometer-measured characteristics in nonagenarians.</p>
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [22385]