Habitual physical activity and sleep in adults with end-stage renal disease
Habitual physical activity and sleep in adults with end-stage renal disease
Background: treatment of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is necessary to maintain life. However, it can cause physiological, psychosocial, and cognitive impairments, which may impact physical activity (PA) and sleep, although there is insufficient device-based data to elucidate such impacts.
Methods: PA, sedentary time and sleep were measured over seven consecutive days in 12 adults with ESRD (9 dialysing at home, 3 dialysing in-centre) using wrist-worn accelerometers. Validated raw acceleration thresholds were used to quantify time spent in each PA intensity domain and sedentary, and sleep duration and efficiency.
Results: adults with ESRD engaged in little moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA; 6.9 ± 9.7 mins•day-1) and spent 770.0 ± 68.6 mins•day-1being sedentary. People dialysing at home engaged in more light-intensity PA than those attending in-centre (131.2 ± 28.1 vs 106.9 ± 5.4 mins•day-1, respectively; p = 0.05; ES = 0.56), however neither group met the recommended guidelines for daily MVPA. Individuals with ESRD slept for an average of 286.8 ± 79.3 mins•night-1 with an efficiency of 68.4 ± 18.5%, although people dialysing at home slept for longer and more efficiently (74.5% vs. 50.0%, p = 0.07, ES = 0.51) than those attending in-centre.
Conclusion: this study suggests that adults with ESRD engage in less total PA than recommended guidelines and are characterised by poor sleep duration and efficiency. Moreover, results indicate that dialysis mode may influence PA, sedentary time and sleep, with those dialysing at home engaging in greater LPA and achieving a greater sleep duration and efficiency.
Haemodialysis, accelerometry, physical activity, sleep quality
38–43
Antoun, Joe
da094fa4-76bc-4013-991a-701ded15d57c
Shepherd, Ant
7103ee4b-4fb4-41e0-8f00-9e647e15b3fb
McNarry, Melitta A.
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Mackintosh, Kelly A.
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Corbett, Jo
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Sangala, Nick
f7d2ce33-bbfb-49fd-9edc-13ac3c26455c
Lewis, Robert J.
1ec55bfa-0783-4be4-bdb8-e3326c6e4078
Saynor, Zoe
a4357c7d-db59-4fa5-b24f-58d2f7e74e39
1 June 2022
Antoun, Joe
da094fa4-76bc-4013-991a-701ded15d57c
Shepherd, Ant
7103ee4b-4fb4-41e0-8f00-9e647e15b3fb
McNarry, Melitta A.
41b60ac5-2ab3-43a5-9379-64be21517863
Mackintosh, Kelly A.
8f43d18a-f667-444e-a0f6-64c28196e19b
Corbett, Jo
e0e14f67-2457-42d4-8a6c-1071ffebd836
Sangala, Nick
f7d2ce33-bbfb-49fd-9edc-13ac3c26455c
Lewis, Robert J.
1ec55bfa-0783-4be4-bdb8-e3326c6e4078
Saynor, Zoe
a4357c7d-db59-4fa5-b24f-58d2f7e74e39
Antoun, Joe, Shepherd, Ant, McNarry, Melitta A., Mackintosh, Kelly A., Corbett, Jo, Sangala, Nick, Lewis, Robert J. and Saynor, Zoe
(2022)
Habitual physical activity and sleep in adults with end-stage renal disease.
Journal of Clinical Exercise Physiology, 11 (2), .
(doi:10.31189/2165-6193-11.2.38).
Abstract
Background: treatment of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is necessary to maintain life. However, it can cause physiological, psychosocial, and cognitive impairments, which may impact physical activity (PA) and sleep, although there is insufficient device-based data to elucidate such impacts.
Methods: PA, sedentary time and sleep were measured over seven consecutive days in 12 adults with ESRD (9 dialysing at home, 3 dialysing in-centre) using wrist-worn accelerometers. Validated raw acceleration thresholds were used to quantify time spent in each PA intensity domain and sedentary, and sleep duration and efficiency.
Results: adults with ESRD engaged in little moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA; 6.9 ± 9.7 mins•day-1) and spent 770.0 ± 68.6 mins•day-1being sedentary. People dialysing at home engaged in more light-intensity PA than those attending in-centre (131.2 ± 28.1 vs 106.9 ± 5.4 mins•day-1, respectively; p = 0.05; ES = 0.56), however neither group met the recommended guidelines for daily MVPA. Individuals with ESRD slept for an average of 286.8 ± 79.3 mins•night-1 with an efficiency of 68.4 ± 18.5%, although people dialysing at home slept for longer and more efficiently (74.5% vs. 50.0%, p = 0.07, ES = 0.51) than those attending in-centre.
Conclusion: this study suggests that adults with ESRD engage in less total PA than recommended guidelines and are characterised by poor sleep duration and efficiency. Moreover, results indicate that dialysis mode may influence PA, sedentary time and sleep, with those dialysing at home engaging in greater LPA and achieving a greater sleep duration and efficiency.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 19 May 2022
Published date: 1 June 2022
Keywords:
Haemodialysis, accelerometry, physical activity, sleep quality
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Local EPrints ID: 493869
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493869
ISSN: 2165-6193
PURE UUID: d6e0fdf0-4178-478a-842b-145d51e4be80
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Date deposited: 16 Sep 2024 16:43
Last modified: 17 Sep 2024 02:09
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Author:
Joe Antoun
Author:
Ant Shepherd
Author:
Melitta A. McNarry
Author:
Kelly A. Mackintosh
Author:
Jo Corbett
Author:
Nick Sangala
Author:
Robert J. Lewis
Author:
Zoe Saynor
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