Physical Activity Declines over a 12-Month Period in Parkinson's Disease: Considerations for Longitudinal Activity Monitoring.

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
Anson B Rosenfeldt, A Elizabeth Jansen, Cielita Lopez-Lennon, Eric Zimmerman, Peter B Imrey, Leland E Dibble, Jay L Alberts
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Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this project was to evaluate trends in daily steps in individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) over a 12-month period using continuous activity monitoring. Environmental (temperature) and cultural factors (represented by day of the week) were evaluated as potential external sources of variability. It was hypothesized that participants daily step counts would decline over the course of 12 months. Further, it was hypothesized that participants would take more steps on warmer days and that the day of the week would have minimal impact on step count as many participants were no longer in the workforce.

Methods: Participants were part of the Usual and Customary Care arm (N = 119) of the CYClical Lower Extremity Exercise Trial for Parkinson's disease - II (CYCLE-II) at the Cleveland Clinic and University of Utah. Participants wore a Garmin Vivofit4® device daily for 12-months. A linear mixed effects model was created to model daily steps over 12-months.

Results: Participants wore their activity monitors 93% of study days. Steps per day declined by 6.1% over 12 months (95% CI 12.6% decline, 0.9% increase, p = 0.09). Steps per day were greater with warmer temperatures (p < 0.001), plateauing and declining around 75-85 degrees Fahrenheit (24-29 degrees Celsius). Participants took fewer steps on Sundays; this difference was more pronounced for Utah participants, who took 25% fewer steps on Sundays compared to other weekdays (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: Most individuals live with PD for decades, and interventions should address the expected decline of 6% in daily step count. Environmental and cultural factors impact daily step count and should be adjusted for in short- and long-term monitoring of physical activity in individuals with PD.

帕金森病患者 12 个月内的体力活动量下降:纵向活动监测的注意事项。
目的:本项目旨在通过连续活动监测,评估帕金森病(PD)患者在 12 个月内的每日步数趋势。环境(温度)和文化因素(以星期为代表)被评估为潜在的外部变异源。假设参与者的每日步数在 12 个月内会下降。此外,还假设参与者会在天气较热的日子里迈出更多的步数,而一周中的哪一天对步数的影响微乎其微,因为许多参与者已不再是劳动力:参与者是克利夫兰诊所和犹他大学帕金森病临床下肢锻炼试验 II(CYCLE-II)通常和惯常护理组(N = 119)的成员。参与者每天佩戴 Garmin Vivofit4® 设备,为期 12 个月。建立了一个线性混合效应模型来模拟 12 个月内的每日步数:结果:参与者在 93% 的研究日都佩戴了活动监测器。在 12 个月内,每天的步数减少了 6.1%(95% CI 为减少 12.6%,增加 0.9%,P = 0.09)。气温越高,每天的步数越多(p < 0.001),在华氏 75-85 度(摄氏 24-29 度)左右趋于稳定并有所下降。参与者在周日走的步数较少;犹他州参与者的这一差异更为明显,他们在周日走的步数比其他工作日少 25% (p < 0.001):结论:大多数帕金森病患者的寿命长达数十年,干预措施应针对每日步数预期下降 6% 的情况。环境和文化因素会影响每天的步数,在对帕金森病患者的体力活动进行短期和长期监测时应加以调整。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
4.90%
发文量
2568
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise® features original investigations, clinical studies, and comprehensive reviews on current topics in sports medicine and exercise science. With this leading multidisciplinary journal, exercise physiologists, physiatrists, physical therapists, team physicians, and athletic trainers get a vital exchange of information from basic and applied science, medicine, education, and allied health fields.
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