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Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the accuracy of uploadable pedometers to accurately count steps during treadmill (TM) and overground (OG) walking, and during a 24 hour monitoring period (24 hr) under free living conditions in young and older adults. METHODS: One hundred and two par...

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Autores principales: Dondzila, Christopher J, Swartz, Ann M, Miller, Nora E, Lenz, Elizabeth K, Strath, Scott J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3541210/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23232036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-9-143
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author Dondzila, Christopher J
Swartz, Ann M
Miller, Nora E
Lenz, Elizabeth K
Strath, Scott J
author_facet Dondzila, Christopher J
Swartz, Ann M
Miller, Nora E
Lenz, Elizabeth K
Strath, Scott J
author_sort Dondzila, Christopher J
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the accuracy of uploadable pedometers to accurately count steps during treadmill (TM) and overground (OG) walking, and during a 24 hour monitoring period (24 hr) under free living conditions in young and older adults. METHODS: One hundred and two participants (n=53 aged 20–49 yrs; n=49 aged 50–80 yrs) completed a TM protocol (53.6, 67.0, 80.4, 93.8, and 107.2 m/min, five minutes for each speed) and an OG walking protocol (self-determined “< normal”, “normal”, and “> normal” walking speeds) while wearing two waist-mounted uploadable pedometers (Omron HJ-720ITC [OM] and Kenz Lifecorder EX [LC]). Actual steps were manually tallied by a researcher. During the 24 hr period, participants wore a New Lifestyles-1000 (NL) pedometer (standard of care) attached to a belt at waist level over the midline of the left thigh, in addition to the LC on the belt over the midline of the right thigh. The following day, the same procedure was conducted, replacing the LC with the OM. One-sample t-tests were performed to compare measured and manually tallied steps during the TM and OG protocols, and between steps quantified by the NL with that of the OM and LC during the 24 hr period. Mean error step scores (MES, criterion – device) and 95% Limits of Agreement (LoA) were calculated. RESULTS: There were no significant differences between the OM and tallied steps for any of the TM speeds for either the young or older adult groups. The LC significantly underestimated steps for the young adult group during the 53.6 m/min TM speed (MES 31.4 [14.5, 48.3]) and during the OG < normal walking speed (MES 12.0 [0.9, 23.1] (p<0.01 for both age groups). The LC also significantly underestimated steps for the older adult group during the TM speeds of 53.6 m/min (MES 64.5 [45.6, 83.4]), 67.0 m/min (MES 15.1 [6.1, 24.0]), and 80.4 m/min (MES 3.2 [0.6, 5.9]) (p<0.01 for all speeds), in addition to the OG < normal walking speed (MES 14.7 [−13.3, 42.6] (p<0.01). The OM reported significantly lower steps during the 24 hr period for the young adult group by 949.1 steps (t=6.111, p<0.025) and for the older adult group by 612.9 steps (t=2.397, p<0.025). CONCLUSION: Both the OM and LC pedometers were more accurate as TM and OG walking speed increased. The OM significantly underestimated steps during the 24 hr compared with a standard of care evaluation. Overall, both uploadable pedometers appear acceptable to use in young or old age groups to measure walking behavior.
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spelling pubmed-35412102013-01-11 Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults Dondzila, Christopher J Swartz, Ann M Miller, Nora E Lenz, Elizabeth K Strath, Scott J Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act Research PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the accuracy of uploadable pedometers to accurately count steps during treadmill (TM) and overground (OG) walking, and during a 24 hour monitoring period (24 hr) under free living conditions in young and older adults. METHODS: One hundred and two participants (n=53 aged 20–49 yrs; n=49 aged 50–80 yrs) completed a TM protocol (53.6, 67.0, 80.4, 93.8, and 107.2 m/min, five minutes for each speed) and an OG walking protocol (self-determined “< normal”, “normal”, and “> normal” walking speeds) while wearing two waist-mounted uploadable pedometers (Omron HJ-720ITC [OM] and Kenz Lifecorder EX [LC]). Actual steps were manually tallied by a researcher. During the 24 hr period, participants wore a New Lifestyles-1000 (NL) pedometer (standard of care) attached to a belt at waist level over the midline of the left thigh, in addition to the LC on the belt over the midline of the right thigh. The following day, the same procedure was conducted, replacing the LC with the OM. One-sample t-tests were performed to compare measured and manually tallied steps during the TM and OG protocols, and between steps quantified by the NL with that of the OM and LC during the 24 hr period. Mean error step scores (MES, criterion – device) and 95% Limits of Agreement (LoA) were calculated. RESULTS: There were no significant differences between the OM and tallied steps for any of the TM speeds for either the young or older adult groups. The LC significantly underestimated steps for the young adult group during the 53.6 m/min TM speed (MES 31.4 [14.5, 48.3]) and during the OG < normal walking speed (MES 12.0 [0.9, 23.1] (p<0.01 for both age groups). The LC also significantly underestimated steps for the older adult group during the TM speeds of 53.6 m/min (MES 64.5 [45.6, 83.4]), 67.0 m/min (MES 15.1 [6.1, 24.0]), and 80.4 m/min (MES 3.2 [0.6, 5.9]) (p<0.01 for all speeds), in addition to the OG < normal walking speed (MES 14.7 [−13.3, 42.6] (p<0.01). The OM reported significantly lower steps during the 24 hr period for the young adult group by 949.1 steps (t=6.111, p<0.025) and for the older adult group by 612.9 steps (t=2.397, p<0.025). CONCLUSION: Both the OM and LC pedometers were more accurate as TM and OG walking speed increased. The OM significantly underestimated steps during the 24 hr compared with a standard of care evaluation. Overall, both uploadable pedometers appear acceptable to use in young or old age groups to measure walking behavior. BioMed Central 2012-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3541210/ /pubmed/23232036 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-9-143 Text en Copyright ©2012 Dondzila et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Dondzila, Christopher J
Swartz, Ann M
Miller, Nora E
Lenz, Elizabeth K
Strath, Scott J
Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
title Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
title_full Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
title_fullStr Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
title_short Accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
title_sort accuracy of uploadable pedometers in laboratory, overground, and free-living conditions in young and older adults
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3541210/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23232036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-9-143
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