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Daily Physical Activity Patterns and Their Associations with Cardiometabolic Biomarkers: The Maastricht Study




TekijätLeskinen Tuija, Lima Passos Valéria, Dagnelie Pieter C., Savelberg Hans H. C. M., De Galan Bastiaan E., Eussen Simone J. P. M., Stehouwer Coen D. A., Stenholm Sari, Koster Annemarie

KustantajaLippincott Williams and Wilkins

Julkaisuvuosi2023

JournalMedicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiMedicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

Vuosikerta55

Numero5

Aloitussivu837

Lopetussivu846

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1249/MSS.0000000000003108

Verkko-osoitehttps://journals.lww.com/acsm-msse/Fulltext/2023/05000/Daily_Physical_Activity_Patterns_and_Their.8.aspx

Rinnakkaistallenteen osoitehttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/179623282


Tiivistelmä

Purpose: This study aimed to identify physical activity patterns and examine their association with cardiometabolic biomarkers in a cross-sectional design.

Methods: Overall 6072 participants (mean age, 60.2 yr; SD 8.6 yr, 50% women) from The Maastricht Study provided daily physical activity data collected with thigh-worn activPAL3 accelerometers. The patterns of daily physical activity over weekdays and weekend days were identified by using Group Based Trajectory Modeling. Cardiometabolic biomarkers included body mass index, waist circumference, office blood pressure, glucose, HbA1c, and cholesterol levels. Associations between the physical activity patterns and cardiometabolic outcomes were examined using the analyses of covariance adjusted for sex, age, education, smoking, and diet. Because of statistically significant interaction, the analyses were stratified by type 2 diabetes status.

Results: Overall, seven physical activity patterns were identified: consistently inactive (21% of participants), consistently low active (41%), active on weekdays (15%), early birds (2%), consistently moderately active (7%), weekend warriors (8%), and consistently highly active (6%). The consistently inactive and low active patterns had higher body mass index, waist, and glucose levels compared with the consistently moderately and highly active patterns, and these associations were more pronounced for participants with type 2 diabetes. The more irregular patterns accumulated moderate daily total activity levels but had rather similar cardiometabolic profiles compared with the consistently active groups.

Conclusions: The cardiometabolic profile was most favorable in the consistently highly active group. All patterns accumulating moderate to high levels of daily total physical activity had similar health profile suggesting that the amount of daily physical activity rather than the pattern is more important for cardiometabolic health.


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Last updated on 2025-27-03 at 21:54