Reliability of 24-h measurement of physical activity, sleep, and sedentary time in adult patients with asthma using a triaxial accelerometer

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Titel: Reliability of 24-h measurement of physical activity, sleep, and sedentary time in adult patients with asthma using a triaxial accelerometer
Autoren: S. M. J. Janssen, M. A. Spruit, R. S. Djamin, J. C. C. M in ‘t Veen, H. A. C. van Helvoort, A. J. van ‘t Hul
Quelle: Journal of Asthma, 62, 4, pp. 566-576
Verlagsinformationen: Informa UK Limited, 2024.
Publikationsjahr: 2024
Schlagwörter: Male, Adult, reliability, sedentary time, physical activity, Reproducibility of Results, Middle Aged, Asthma, accelerometer, Accelerometry, Humans, Female, sleep, Sedentary Behavior, Pulmonary Diseases - Radboud University Medical Center, Sleep, Exercise, Aged
Beschreibung: Physical activity (PA), sleep, and sedentary time (SST) are important outcomes to monitor and to improve as part of patients’ asthma management. This study aimed to assess the number of measurement days needed to reliably measure PA and SST. Secondly, the influence of external factors on the reliability of measuring PA and SST was studied. Adult patients with stable asthma were asked to wear a triaxial accelerometer for at least four days, with at least 22.5 h of wear time per day. The Intraclass Correlation Coefficients (ICCs) between different number of measurement days were used to determine reliability. Values ≥0.75 indicated good reliability. Data from 452 patients were analyzed (63% women; age: 49 ± 16 years; FEV1: 87 ± 17% predicted). PA could reliably be measured with four valid measurement days (ICC 0.761). For SST, three days were needed (ICC 0.778). In summer and autumn, three days were needed to reliably measure PA, in winter four, in spring six. For SST, five days were needed in spring for good reliability, and two in all other seasons. Based on data from four valid days, PA and SST can reliably be measured with an accelerometer in patients with asthma. Seasonal influences are present, especially during spring. When measuring for four days, using only weekdays or three weekdays and one weekend day is recommended. The degree of asthma control, dyspnea or spirometric values did not influence the reliability.
Publikationsart: Article
Other literature type
Sprache: English
ISSN: 1532-4303
0277-0903
DOI: 10.1080/02770903.2024.2420758
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.27508477.v1
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.27508477
Zugangs-URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39445894
https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/publications/6fa264c0-0b26-406c-9352-48508e0e9acb
https://doi.org/10.1080/02770903.2024.2420758
https://repository.ubn.ru.nl//bitstream/handle/2066/317791/317791.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/2066/317791
Rights: CC BY
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....65a41a39d4aa2371e5f2496236c549a2
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:Physical activity (PA), sleep, and sedentary time (SST) are important outcomes to monitor and to improve as part of patients’ asthma management. This study aimed to assess the number of measurement days needed to reliably measure PA and SST. Secondly, the influence of external factors on the reliability of measuring PA and SST was studied. Adult patients with stable asthma were asked to wear a triaxial accelerometer for at least four days, with at least 22.5 h of wear time per day. The Intraclass Correlation Coefficients (ICCs) between different number of measurement days were used to determine reliability. Values ≥0.75 indicated good reliability. Data from 452 patients were analyzed (63% women; age: 49 ± 16 years; FEV1: 87 ± 17% predicted). PA could reliably be measured with four valid measurement days (ICC 0.761). For SST, three days were needed (ICC 0.778). In summer and autumn, three days were needed to reliably measure PA, in winter four, in spring six. For SST, five days were needed in spring for good reliability, and two in all other seasons. Based on data from four valid days, PA and SST can reliably be measured with an accelerometer in patients with asthma. Seasonal influences are present, especially during spring. When measuring for four days, using only weekdays or three weekdays and one weekend day is recommended. The degree of asthma control, dyspnea or spirometric values did not influence the reliability.
ISSN:15324303
02770903
DOI:10.1080/02770903.2024.2420758