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Associations of lifetime walking and weight bearing exercise with accelerometer-measured high impact physical activity in later life

Associations of lifetime walking and weight bearing exercise with accelerometer-measured high impact physical activity in later life
Associations of lifetime walking and weight bearing exercise with accelerometer-measured high impact physical activity in later life
High impact physical activity (PA) is thought to benefit bone. We examined associations of lifetime walking and weight bearing exercise with accelerometer-measured high impact and overall PA in later life. Data were from 848 participants (66.2% female, mean age = 72.4 years) from the Cohort for Skeletal Health in Bristol and Avon, Hertfordshire Cohort Study and MRC National Survey of Health and Development. Acceleration peaks from seven-day hip-worn accelerometer recordings were used to derive counts of high impact and overall PA. Walking and weight bearing exercise up to age 18, between 18–29, 30–49 and since age 50 were recalled using questionnaires. Responses in each age category were dichotomised and cumulative scores derived. Linear regression was used for analysis. Greater lifetime walking was related to higher overall, but not high impact PA, whereas greater lifetime weight bearing exercise was related to higher overall and high impact PA. For example, fully-adjusted differences in log-overall and log-high impact PA respectively for highest versus lowest lifetime scores were: walking [0.224 (0.087, 0.362) and 0.239 (− 0.058, 0.536)], and weight bearing exercise [0.754 (0.432, 1.076) and 0.587 (0.270, 0.904)]. For both walking and weight bearing exercise, associations were strongest in the ‘since age 50’ category. Those reporting the most walking and weight bearing exercise since age 50 had highest overall and high impact PA, e.g. fully-adjusted difference in log-high impact PA versus least walking and weight bearing exercise = 0.588 (0.226, 0.951). Promoting walking and weight bearing exercise from midlife may help increase potentially osteogenic PA levels in later life.
183-189
Elhakeem, Ahmed
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Hannam, Kimberly
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Deere, Kevin C.
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Hartley, April
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Clark, Emma M.
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Moss, Charlotte L.
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Edwards, M.H.
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Dennison, Elaine
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Gaysin, Tim
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Kuh, D.
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Wong, A.
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Fox, K.R.
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Cooper, Cyrus
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Cooper, R.
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Tobias, J.H.
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Elhakeem, Ahmed
f9bced1c-9287-4a5e-b892-17998dc6ac88
Hannam, Kimberly
8592a37d-8ee6-447d-9a21-4c4c26979462
Deere, Kevin C.
b105adce-b002-46af-ac92-d2a4ee416d60
Hartley, April
cfb02c1c-4233-4660-84f8-43a51e8ada9a
Clark, Emma M.
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Moss, Charlotte L.
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Edwards, M.H.
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Dennison, Elaine
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Gaysin, Tim
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Kuh, D.
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Wong, A.
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Fox, K.R.
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Cooper, Cyrus
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Cooper, R.
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Tobias, J.H.
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Elhakeem, Ahmed, Hannam, Kimberly, Deere, Kevin C., Hartley, April, Clark, Emma M., Moss, Charlotte L., Edwards, M.H., Dennison, Elaine, Gaysin, Tim, Kuh, D., Wong, A., Fox, K.R., Cooper, Cyrus, Cooper, R. and Tobias, J.H. (2017) Associations of lifetime walking and weight bearing exercise with accelerometer-measured high impact physical activity in later life. Preventive Medicine Reports, 8, 183-189. (doi:10.1016/j.pmedr.2017.10.011).

Record type: Article

Abstract

High impact physical activity (PA) is thought to benefit bone. We examined associations of lifetime walking and weight bearing exercise with accelerometer-measured high impact and overall PA in later life. Data were from 848 participants (66.2% female, mean age = 72.4 years) from the Cohort for Skeletal Health in Bristol and Avon, Hertfordshire Cohort Study and MRC National Survey of Health and Development. Acceleration peaks from seven-day hip-worn accelerometer recordings were used to derive counts of high impact and overall PA. Walking and weight bearing exercise up to age 18, between 18–29, 30–49 and since age 50 were recalled using questionnaires. Responses in each age category were dichotomised and cumulative scores derived. Linear regression was used for analysis. Greater lifetime walking was related to higher overall, but not high impact PA, whereas greater lifetime weight bearing exercise was related to higher overall and high impact PA. For example, fully-adjusted differences in log-overall and log-high impact PA respectively for highest versus lowest lifetime scores were: walking [0.224 (0.087, 0.362) and 0.239 (− 0.058, 0.536)], and weight bearing exercise [0.754 (0.432, 1.076) and 0.587 (0.270, 0.904)]. For both walking and weight bearing exercise, associations were strongest in the ‘since age 50’ category. Those reporting the most walking and weight bearing exercise since age 50 had highest overall and high impact PA, e.g. fully-adjusted difference in log-high impact PA versus least walking and weight bearing exercise = 0.588 (0.226, 0.951). Promoting walking and weight bearing exercise from midlife may help increase potentially osteogenic PA levels in later life.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 October 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 October 2017
Published date: December 2017

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Local EPrints ID: 419714
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/419714
PURE UUID: 644bd16f-57b5-4136-bfa4-5ffeec3b9a77
ORCID for Elaine Dennison: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3048-4961
ORCID for Cyrus Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2018 16:31
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Ahmed Elhakeem
Author: Kimberly Hannam
Author: Kevin C. Deere
Author: April Hartley
Author: Emma M. Clark
Author: Charlotte L. Moss
Author: M.H. Edwards
Author: Elaine Dennison ORCID iD
Author: Tim Gaysin
Author: D. Kuh
Author: A. Wong
Author: K.R. Fox
Author: Cyrus Cooper ORCID iD
Author: R. Cooper
Author: J.H. Tobias

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