COVID-19 and the impact of physical activity on persistent symptoms.

IF 2.3 Q2 SPORT SCIENCES
Frontiers in Sports and Active Living Pub Date : 2025-04-24 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fspor.2025.1560023
Lauren E Opielinski, Toni D Uhrich, Michael H Haischer, Rachel N Beilfuss, Lindsey M Mirkes Clark, Kamryn M Kroner, Rachel E Bollaert, Michael J Danduran, Linda B Piacentine, Marie Hoeger Bement, Paula E Papanek, Sandra K Hunter
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Physical activity is protective against chronic disease but whether activity is associated with persistent symptoms in non-hospitalized coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) survivors is unknown. The purpose of the study was to determine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on physical activity levels and the influence of physical activity on acute COVID-19 and long COVID symptoms in non-hospitalized COVID-19 survivors.

Methods: In total, 64 non-hospitalized COVID-19 survivors (45 female participants, 40 ± 18 years) were assessed for activity levels, body composition, and symptoms of COVID-19 8.5 ± 4.7 months post-infection and categorized into two groups: (1) persistent symptoms and (2) no symptoms at the time of testing. Furthermore, 43 of the 64 participants (28 female participants, 46 ± 18 years) completed a follow-up questionnaire online 51.0 ± 39.7 months (4.25 years) post-infection. A subset of 22 COVID-19 survivors (16 female participants, 35 ± 16 years) were matched for age, sex, and body mass index with healthy controls. Physical activity was quantified using (1) self-reported questionnaire (International Physical Activity Questionnaire; IPAQ-SF) at three time periods; prior to COVID-19 infection, at the time of laboratory testing (8.5 ± 4.7 months after infection), and during an online follow-up (51.0 ± 39.7 months, i.e., 4.25 years after infection); and (2) 7 days of wearing an ActiGraph accelerometer following laboratory testing.

Results: Physical activity (IPAQ-SF) declined in COVID-19 survivors from pre-COVID-19 infection to 8.5 ± 4.7 months after infection [3,656 vs. 2,656 metabolic equivalent of task (MET) min/week, 27% decrease, p < 0.001, n = 64] and rebounded to levels similar to pre-COVID-19 infection at 4.25 years after infection (p = 0.068, n = 43). Activity levels quantified with accelerometry did not differ between COVID-19 survivors and controls. However, COVID-19 survivors who reported persistent symptoms 8.5 months after infection (n = 29) engaged in less moderate-vigorous physical activity and steps/day than those without persistent symptoms (n = 27) (37 vs. 49 MET min/day, p = 0.014 and 7,915 vs. 9,540 steps/day, p = 0.014).

Discussion: Both COVID-19 survivors and matched controls reported reductions in physical activity indicating that lower levels of activity were likely due to the pandemic rather than COVID-19 infection alone. However, those who were most affected by COVID-19 infection with persistent symptoms had the greatest reductions in physical activity, even at ∼8 months and ∼4 years post-infection.

COVID-19和体力活动对持续症状的影响。
身体活动可以预防慢性疾病,但活动是否与未住院的2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)幸存者的持续症状相关尚不清楚。本研究的目的是确定COVID-19大流行对身体活动水平的影响,以及身体活动对未住院的COVID-19幸存者的急性COVID-19和长期COVID-19症状的影响。方法:共对64名未住院的COVID-19幸存者(45名女性,40±18岁)进行感染后8.5±4.7个月的COVID-19活动水平、身体成分和症状评估,并将其分为两组:(1)持续症状和(2)检测时无症状。此外,64名参与者中有43名(28名女性,46±18岁)在感染后51.0±39.7个月(4.25年)完成了在线随访问卷。将22名COVID-19幸存者(16名女性,35±16岁)的年龄、性别和体重指数与健康对照组相匹配。身体活动采用(1)自我报告问卷(国际身体活动问卷;IPAQ-SF)在三个时间段;在COVID-19感染前、实验室检测时(感染后8.5±4.7个月)和在线随访时(感染后51.0±39.7个月,即感染后4.25年);(2)实验室测试后佩戴ActiGraph加速度计7天。结果:COVID-19幸存者的身体活动(IPAQ-SF)从感染前降至感染后8.5±4.7个月[3,656对2,656代谢当量(MET)分钟/周,下降27%,p n = 64],并在感染后4.25年反弹至与感染前相似的水平(p = 0.068, n = 43)。用加速度计量化的活动水平在COVID-19幸存者和对照组之间没有差异。然而,在感染后8.5个月报告持续症状的COVID-19幸存者(n = 29)比没有持续症状的幸存者(n = 27)从事的中高强度体力活动和每天的步数更少(37对49 MET min/天,p = 0.014和7,915对9,540步/天,p = 0.014)。讨论:COVID-19幸存者和匹配的对照组都报告了身体活动的减少,这表明活动水平降低可能是由于大流行,而不仅仅是COVID-19感染。然而,那些受COVID-19感染影响最严重且症状持续的人,即使在感染后8个月和4年,身体活动的减少幅度也最大。
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
2.60
自引率
7.40%
发文量
459
审稿时长
15 weeks
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