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Cadence‐based classification of moderate‐intensity overground walking in 41‐ to 85‐year‐old adults

Authors :
Elroy J. Aguiar
Jose Mora‐Gonzalez
Scott W. Ducharme
Christopher C. Moore
Zachary R. Gould
Colleen J. Chase
Marcos A. Amalbert‐Birriel
Stuart R. Chipkin
John Staudenmayer
Peixuan Zheng
Catrine Tudor‐Locke
Source :
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports. 33:433-443
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Walking cadence (steps/min) has emerged as a valid proxy of physical activity intensity, with consensus across numerous laboratory-based treadmill studies that ≥100 steps/min approximates absolutely defined moderate intensity (≥3 metabolic equivalents; METs). We recently reported that this cadence threshold had a classification accuracy of 73.3% for identifying moderate intensity during preferred pace overground walking in young adults. The purpose of this study was to evaluate and compare the performance of a cadence threshold of ≥100 steps/min for correctly classifying moderate intensity during overground walking in middle- and older-aged adults.Participants (N = 174, 48.3% female, 41-85 years of age) completed laboratory-based cross-sectional study involving an indoor 5-min overground walking trial at their preferred pace. Steps were manually counted and converted to cadence (total steps/5 min). Intensity was measured using indirect calorimetry and expressed as METs. Classification accuracy (sensitivity, specificity, accuracy) of a cadence threshold of ≥100 steps/min to identify individuals walking at ≥3 METs was calculated.The ≥100 steps/min threshold demonstrated accuracy of 74.7% for classifying moderate intensity. When comparing middle- vs. older-aged adults, similar accuracy (73.4% vs. 75.8%, respectively) and specificity (33.3% vs. 34.5%) were observed. Sensitivity was high, but was lower for middle- vs. older-aged adults (85.2% vs. 93.9%, respectively).A cadence threshold of ≥100 steps/min accurately identified moderate-intensity overground walking. Furthermore, accuracy was similar when comparing middle- and older-aged adults. These findings extend our previous analysis in younger adults and confirm the appropriateness of applying this cadence threshold across the adult lifespan.

Details

ISSN :
16000838 and 09057188
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0fdb7720fdb8db9167660a76bdc396e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/sms.14274