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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Associations of Activity Fragmentation with Physical and Mental Fatigability among Community-Dwelling 75-, 80- and 85-Year-Old People
Heidi SkantzTimo RantalainenLaura KaravirtaTaina RantanenMerja RantakokkoLotta PalmbergSini SiltanenMilla SaajanahoErja Portegijssubject
MaleAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyCross-sectional studyMental fatigueväsymysPhysical ExertionPhysical activityphysical activityWalkingliikunta03 medical and health sciencesadaptive strategies0302 clinical medicinePhysical medicine and rehabilitationhenkinen hyvinvointiSurveys and QuestionnairesAccelerometryHumansMedicine030212 general & internal medicineExertionExercise physiologyExerciseFatigueAgedbusiness.industryFragmentation (computing)Physical activity levelactivity patternsCross-Sectional StudiesPhysical FatigueFemalefatigueIndependent LivingGeriatrics and Gerontologybusinessfyysinen hyvinvointi030217 neurology & neurosurgeryfyysinen aktiivisuusikääntyneetdescription
Abstract Background Fatigue related to task standardized by duration and intensity, termed fatigability, could manifest as shortening of activity bouts throughout the day causing daily activity to accumulate in a more fragmented pattern. Our purpose was to study the association of activity fragmentation with physical and mental dimensions of fatigability. Methods A cross-sectional study of 485 community-dwelling 75-, 80-, and 85-year-old people using a thigh-worn accelerometer for 3–7 days. Activity fragmentation was studied as Active-to-Sedentary Transition Probability for 2 operational definitions of physical activity: accelerations equivalent to at least light physical activity and for upright posture. Physical fatigability was assessed as perceived exertion fatigability, performance fatigability severity, and with the Physical Fatigue Subscale of the Situational Fatigue Scale. Mental fatigability was assessed with the Mental Fatigue Subscale of the Situational Fatigue Scale and as a decrease in perceived mental alertness after a 6-minute walk test. Results Higher activity fragmentation was associated with higher self-reported physical fatigability, perceived exertion fatigability, and performance fatigability severity, independent of total activity minutes (β = 0.13–0.33, p < .05 for all). Higher activity fragmentation was not associated with mental fatigability in the fully adjusted models. The associations with fatigability indices were similar for both activity fragmentation indicators. Associations of activity fragmentation and performance fatigability severity were similar also among those with the highest intensity-based physical activity volume. Conclusions The findings provide support that studying fragmented activity patterns can be useful in identifying those at risk for high fatigability, even among those with relatively high physical activity level.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |