39 research outputs found

    Health-Related and Sociodemographic Correlates of Meeting the Muscle Strengthening Exercise Recommendations in Middle-Aged and Older Adults with and without Disabilities

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    ut disabilities Shirit Kamil-Rosenberg, Mary L. Greaney & Carol Ewing Garber Sport Sciences for Health (2020)Cite this article 51 Accesses 4 Altmetric Metricsdetails Abstract Purpose To identify sociodemographic and health correlates of meeting the muscle strengthening (MS) exercise recommendations in middle-aged and older adults by disability status. Methods Respondents from the 2011 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System were stratified by disability status (with disability, without disability), age [ages 45–64 (middle-aged), 65 + years of age (older adults)] and whether they met MS recommendations (yes, no). Two logistic regression models were run to evaluate whether perceived health status and sociodemographic characteristics were associated with meeting the MS recommendations by disability status. Results The sample included 477,662. Middle-aged persons were 20% more likely than older adults to meet the MS recommendations. Persons with a disability were less likely to meet muscle strengthening recommendations compared with those without. Persons with a disability who reported having poor health were ~ 65% less likely to meet the MS recommendation than those reporting excellent health. Furthermore, those with a disability and with one or more chronic diseases were nearly 40% less likely to meet the MS recommendation than no disability. Among respondents without disability, being Black and being a healthy weight or underweight increased the odds of meeting the MS recommendations. Conclusion Several health and sociodemographic factors were associated with not meeting MS recommendations. Persons with disability and poor health, had the lowest likelihood of participation. Studies are needed to understand whether improving MS exercise behavior may attenuate functional limitations associated with chronic diseases and aging

    Impact of Nusinersen Treatment on Measures of Exercise Intolerance in Spinal Muscular Atrophy

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    Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive neuromuscular disorder, marked by insufficient production of SMN protein, leading to motor neuron dysfunction. Although ubiquitously produced throughout the body, motor neurons and muscle cells are selectively impacted by decreased SMN, which has been linked to impaired oxidative phosphorylation causing altered metabolic function and exercise intolerance. Nusinersen, administered directly to the central nervous (CNS), is an approved therapy that increases SMN protein in an effort to restore motor neuron function. PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of treatment on markers of exercise tolerance in children and adults treated with nusinersen is not known. METHODS: Nusinersen treated ambulatory children and adults with SMA completed a maximal cardiopulmonary exercise (CPX) test on a cycle ergometer at two visits 6 months apart. Oxygen uptake (VO2) at peak exercise, oxygen uptake efficiency slope (OUES), and ventilatory equivalent for oxygen (VE/VO2) at peak exercise were determined. Paired sample t-tests were used to evaluate change between visits. RESULTS: Nine ambulatory children and adults with SMA (89% male) (mean age=32.4, range=13-57 years) were included. The average length of time participants had received treatment was 1.05 years (range= 0.59 – 1.30 years). VO2 significantly increased from 13.49 ml·kg-1· min-1 to 16.52 ml·kg-1· min-1 (P = 0.03), OUES increased from 1324 to 1495 ml·min-1 O2/L· min-1,and VE/VO2 increased from 44.9 to 49.0 after 6-months. No significant differences were found in OUES or VE/VO2 after six months of treatment.(P\u3c 0.05) CONCLUSION: These results show potential to mitigate exercise intolerance with nusinersen treatment in individuals with SMA. VO2 was significantly improved, but an attenuated OUES and exaggerated hyperventilation response, representative measures of efficiency, persists. As aerobic capacity reflects the integrative function of multiple body systems, the improvement observed may be attributed to tissues not directly targeted by Nusinersen. Exercise testing is a valuable method of assessing muscle oxygen kinetics and suggested mitochondrial dysfunction observed in SMA. Combining exercise with drug therapies may further enhance benefits seen by treatment alone and developing specific muscle-targeted therapies may be warranted

    Physical and Mental Health-Related Correlates of Physical Function in Community Dwelling Older Adults: A Cross Sectional Study

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    Background Physical function is the ability to perform both basic and instrumental activities of daily living, and the ability of older adults to reside in the community depends to a large extent on their level of physical function. Multiple physical and health-related variables may differentially affect physical function, but they have not been well characterized. The purpose of this investigation was to identify and examine physical and mental health-related correlates of physical function in a sample of community-dwelling older adults. Methods Nine hundred and four community dwelling older men (n = 263) and women (n = 641) with a mean (95% Confidence Interval) age of 76.6 (76.1, 77.1) years underwent tests of physical function (Timed Up and Go; TUG), Body Mass Index (BMI) was calculated from measured height and weight, and data were collected on self-reported health quality of life (SF-36), falls during the past 6 months, number of medications per day, depression (Geriatric Depression Scale; GDS), social support, and sociodemographic variables. Results Subjects completed the TUG in 8.7 (8.2, 9.2) seconds and expended 6,976 (6,669, 7,284) Kcal.wk-1 in physical activity. The older persons had a mean BMI of 27. 6 (27.2, 28.0), 62% took 3 or more medications per day, and14.4% had fallen one or more times over the last 6 months. Mean scores on the Mental Component Summary (MCS) was 50.6 (50.2, 51,0) and the Physical Component Summary (PCS) was 41.3 (40.8, 41.8). Multiple sequential regression analysis showed that, after adjustment for TUG floor surface correlates of physical function included age, sex, education, physical activity (weekly energy expenditure), general health, bodily pain, number of medications taken per day, depression and Body Mass Index. Further, there is a dose response relationship such that greater degree of physical function impairment is associated with poorer scores on physical health-related variables. Conclusions Physical function in community-dwelling older adults is associated with several physical and mental health-related factors. Further study examining the nature of the relationships between these variables is needed

    Effects of intravenous theophylline on exercise-induced myocardial ischemia: II. A concentration-dependent phenomenon

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    AbstractObjectives. The effects of varying concentrations of theophylline on exercise-induced myocardial ischemia were evaluated in patients with stable coronary artery disease.Background. Theophylline is a competitive antagonist of adenosine and may have potential as an anti-ischemic medication. It is not known whether these effects on myocardial ischemia are concentration dependent.Methods. In a double-blind, randomized, crossover manner, 11 patients received, at 1-week intervals, placebo and each of three theophylline doses by intravenous infusion for 45 min. Graded exercise testing was performed before randomization and immediately after each infusion. Concurrent anti-ischemic medications were withheld for 24 h before each exercise test. Serum theophylline concentrations achieved were 3.9 ± 1.0 mg/liter (low), 8.2 ± 1.8 mg/liter (medium) and 13.2 ± 2.3 mg/liter (high).Results. Compared with placebo, none of the three theophylline infusions produced a significant alteration in rest heart rate, blood pressure, mean frequency or severity of ventricular ectopic activity or noncardiac symptoms. The time to onset of ischemia was progressively increased, with medium and high concentrations achieving statistical significance. Similar patterns were observed for oxygen uptake and the heart rate-systolic blood pressure product at the onset of ischemia. Total exercise duration was significantly prolonged with the medium and high concentrations.Conclusions. It is concluded that administration of varying doses of theophylline before exercise produces a clinically significant and concentration-dependent improvement in the indicators of myocardial ischemia in patients with chronic stable coronary artery disease

    Updating ACSM's Recommendations for Exercise Preparticipation Health Screening

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    The purpose of the American College of Sports Medicine's (ACSM) exercise preparticipation health screening process is to identify individuals who may be at elevated risk for exercise-related sudden cardiac death and/or acute myocardial infarction. Recent studies have suggested that using the current ACSM exercise preparticipation health screening guidelines can result in excessive physician referrals, possibly creating a barrier to exercise participation. In addition, there is considerable evidence that exercise is safe for most people and has many associated health and fitness benefits; exercise-related cardiovascular events are often preceded by warning signs/symptoms; and the cardiovascular risks associated with exercise lessen as individuals become more physically active/fit. Consequently, a scientific roundtable was convened by the ACSM in June 2014 to evaluate the current exercise preparticipation health screening recommendations. The roundtable proposed a new evidence-informed model for exercise preparticipation health screening on the basis of three factors: 1) the individual's current level of physical activity, 2) presence of signs or symptoms and/or known cardiovascular, metabolic, or renal disease, and 3) desired exercise intensity, as these variables have been identified as risk modulators of exercise-related cardiovascular events. Identifying cardiovascular disease risk factors remains an important objective of overall disease prevention and management, but risk factor profiling is no longer included in the exercise preparticipation health screening process. The new ACSM exercise preparticipation health screening recommendations reduce possible unnecessary barriers to adopting and maintaining a regular exercise program, a lifestyle of habitual physical activity, or both, and thereby emphasize the important public health message that regular physical activity is important for all individuals

    Quantifying Physical Activity in Young Children Using a Three-Dimensional Camera

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    The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility and validity of using three-dimensional (3D) video data and computer vision to estimate physical activity intensities in young children. Families with children (2–5-years-old) were invited to participate in semi-structured 20-minute play sessions that included a range of indoor play activities. During the play session, children’s physical activity (PA) was recorded using a 3D camera. PA video data were analyzed via direct observation, and 3D PA video data were processed and converted into triaxial PA accelerations using computer vision. PA video data from children (n = 10) were analyzed using direct observation as the ground truth, and the Receiver Operating Characteristic Area Under the Curve (AUC) was calculated in order to determine the classification accuracy of a Classification and Regression Tree (CART) algorithm for estimating PA intensity from video data. A CART algorithm accurately estimated the proportion of time that children spent sedentary (AUC = 0.89) in light PA (AUC = 0.87) and moderate-vigorous PA (AUC = 0.92) during the play session, and there were no significant differences (p > 0.05) between the directly observed and CART-determined proportions of time spent in each activity intensity. A computer vision algorithm and 3D camera can be used to estimate the proportion of time that children spend in all activity intensities indoors

    Interactive Dyadic Physical Activity and Spatial Proximity Patterns in 2-Year-Olds and Their Parents

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    This study aimed to characterize daily physical activity (PA) behaviors in 2-year-old girls and boys and their parents, with and without an objective measure of dyadic spatial proximity. Urban-dwelling parent⁻toddler dyads (N = 110) wore accelerometers for 7 days, and parents completed a sociodemographic questionnaire. Accelerometers were initialized to collect PA and Bluetooth-based proximity data. After applying wear-time algorithms, n = 65 dyads were further analyzed using a dyadic analysis statistical methodology. Toddler⁻parent sedentary and light PA time were respectively interdependent, conditional on child sex and child-parent proximity, but moderate⁻vigorous physical activity (MVPA) time was not. Toddlers were significantly more active on weekdays and weekends than their parents, and no differences were found in daily PA volumes between girls and boys. In dyads with proximity data (n = 34), analyses of joint (i.e., proximal and mutual) PA time showed that girls participated in significantly more joint PA with their mothers than boys. Children who engaged in ≥60 min of MVPA/day participated in ~2 h of joint PA/day, on average, while children with <60 min of MVPA/day engaged in ~30 min less joint-PA time with their mothers. Boys and girls who participated in higher daily MVPA volumes engaged in joint PA with their mothers across greater relative distances, as compared to less active boys who engaged in joint PA at closer relative distances to their mothers. Toddlers who engaged in ≥60 min of daily MVPA participated in joint PA with their mothers at greater relative distances and for longer durations than less active children. Further research on the dyadic activity⁻proximity relationship is needed across early childhood development
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