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The influence of sitting, standing, and stepping bouts on cardiometabolic health markers in older adults

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-07-28, 13:51 authored by Simone J.J.M. Verswijveren, Cormac Powell, Stephanie E. Chappel, Nicola D. Ridgers, Brian P. Carson, Kieran P. Dowd, Ivan J. Perry, Patricia M. Kearney, Janas M. Harrington, Alan Edward Donnelly
Aside from total time spent in physical activity behaviors, how time is accumulated is important for health. This study examined associations between sitting, standing, and stepping bouts, with cardiometabolic health markers in older adults. Participants from the Mitchelstown Cohort Rescreen Study (N = 221) provided cross-sectional data on activity behaviors (assessed via an activPAL3 Micro) and cardiometabolic health. Bouts of ≥10-, ≥30-, and ≥60-min sitting, standing, and stepping were calculated. Linear regression models were fitted to examine the associations between bouts and cardiometabolic health markers. Sitting (≥10, ≥30, and ≥60 min) and standing (≥10 and ≥30 min) bouts were detrimentally associated with body composition measures, lipid markers, and fasting glucose. The effect for time spent in ≥60-min sitting and ≥30-min standing bouts was larger than shorter bouts. Fragmenting sitting with bouts of stepping may be targeted to benefit cardiometabolic health. Further insights for the role of standing need to be elicited.

Funding

Development of a structure identification methodology for nonlinear dynamic systems

National Research Foundation

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History

Publication

Journal of Aging and Physical Activity (JAPA); 30 (1), pp. 114-122

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

HRB, National Heart Foundation of Australia

Rights

Accepted author manuscript version reprinted, by permission, from Journal of Aging and Physical Activity (JAPA), 2021, http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/japa.2020-0443. © Human Kinetics, Inc.

Language

English

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