Daily Step-Based Recommendations Related to Moderate-to-Vigorous Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior in Adolescents
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/58285Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
University of Uludag
Materia
Step counts Walking cadence Thresholds Children
Date
2019-11-19Referencia bibliográfica
Mayorga-Vega, D., Casado-Robles, C., Viciana, J., & López-Fernández, I. (2019). Daily Step-Based Recommendations Related to Moderate-to-Vigorous Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior in Adolescents. Journal of Sports Science and Medicine, 18(4), 586-595.
Résumé
Among adolescents empirical studies examining the total daily
steps translation of the moderate-to-vigorous physical activity
recommendation are scarce and inconsistent, and there are no previous
studies with cadence-based steps and related to sedentary
behavior. The main objective of the present study was to establish
and compare the accuracy of daily step-based recommendations
related to the moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and sedentary
behavior thresholds in adolescents. The present study followed
a cross-sectional design. A total of 126 adolescents (56
girls) aged 12-15 years old were assessed by ActiGraph GT3X
accelerometers for eight consecutive days (moderate-to-vigorous
physical activity, sedentary behavior, and steps) and the multistage
20-meter shuttle run test (cardiorespiratory fitness). ROC
curve analyses showed that total daily steps (AUC = 0.94, 0.89-
0.99; Threshold ≥ 11,111 steps/ day; P = 0.93; k = 0.67; p < 0.001)
was a more appropriate indicator than cadence-based daily steps
for distinguishing between physically active and inactive adolescents.
Daily step-based thresholds represent a promising way to
translate a total daily sedentary behavior threshold (e.g., total
daily steps, AUC = 0.87, 0.81-0.93; Sensitivity = 0.87; Specificity
= 0.70). Adolescents who met a favorable combination of stepbased
recommendations related to both physical activity and sedentary
behavior thresholds had a higher probability of having a
healthy cardiorespiratory fitness profile than those who did not
meet either of them (e.g., risk ratio = 5.05, 1.69-15.08) or only the
one related to physical activity (e.g., risk ratio = 4.09, 1.36-
12.29). These findings may help policy-makers to provide accurate
daily step-based recommendations that would simplify the
physical activity and sedentary behavior thresholds for adolescents.