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Characterizing objective and self-report habitual physical activity and sedentary time in outpatients with an acquired brain injury

Authors :
Liam P. Pellerine
Katerina Miller
Ryan J. Frayne
Myles W. O'Brien
Source :
Sports Medicine and Health Science, Vol 6, Iss 4, Pp 338-343 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
KeAi Communications Co., Ltd., 2024.

Abstract

Outpatients with an acquired brain injury (ABI) experience physical, mental, and social deficits. ABI can be classified into two subgroups based on mechanism of injury: mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI; e.g., concussion) and other ABI (e.g., stroke, brain aneurysm, encephalitis). Our understanding of habitual activity levels within ABI populations is limited because they are often collected using self-report measures. The purpose of this study was to, 1) describe the habitual activity levels of outpatients with ABI using objective and self-report monitoring, and 2) compare the activity levels of outpatients with mTBI vs. other ABI. Sixteen outpatients with other ABI (mean ​± ​standard deviation: [58 ​± ​13] years, 9 females) and 12 outpatients with mTBI ([48 ​± ​11] years, 9 females) wore a thigh-worn activPAL 24 ​h/day (h/day) for 7-days. Outpatients with ABI averaged (6.0 ​± ​2.3) h/day of upright time, (10.6 ​± ​2.2) h/day of sedentary time, (5.6 ​± ​2.7) h/day in prolonged sedentary bouts > 1 ​h, (5 960 ​± ​3 037) steps/day, and (11 ​± ​13) minutes/day (min/day) of moderate-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). There were no differences between activPAL-derived upright, sedentary, prolonged sedentary time, and physical activity between the mTBI and other ABI groups (all, p ​> ​0.31). Outpatients with ABI overestimated their MVPA levels (+138 ​min/week) and underestimated sedentary time (−4.3 ​h/day) compared to self-report (all, p ​

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26663376
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Sports Medicine and Health Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6836f0ca76d44a45ad8ab20b20dcbe43
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.smhs.2024.02.001