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Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level

BACKGROUND: This research compared accelerometry (ACC)-derived and muscle electromyography (EMG)-based estimates of physical activity (PA) and sedentary time in typical PA tasks and during the daily lives of children. METHODS: Data was included from two exploratory studies. In Study I, 6–7-year-old...

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Autores principales: Gao, Ying, Melin, Martti, Mäkäräinen, Karoliina, Rantalainen, Timo, Pesola, Arto J., Laukkanen, Arto, Sääkslahti, Arja, Finni, Taija
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6108314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30155355
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5437
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author Gao, Ying
Melin, Martti
Mäkäräinen, Karoliina
Rantalainen, Timo
Pesola, Arto J.
Laukkanen, Arto
Sääkslahti, Arja
Finni, Taija
author_facet Gao, Ying
Melin, Martti
Mäkäräinen, Karoliina
Rantalainen, Timo
Pesola, Arto J.
Laukkanen, Arto
Sääkslahti, Arja
Finni, Taija
author_sort Gao, Ying
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This research compared accelerometry (ACC)-derived and muscle electromyography (EMG)-based estimates of physical activity (PA) and sedentary time in typical PA tasks and during the daily lives of children. METHODS: Data was included from two exploratory studies. In Study I, 6–7-year-old children (n = 11, 64% girls) were assessed for eight PA tasks (walking, stair negotiation, climbing, crawling, swinging, balancing, trampoline jumping and a game of tag). In Study II, 7–9-year-old children (n = 14, 38% girls) were assessed for six PA tasks (walking, sitting, static squat, single leg hops, jump for height and standing long jump), and daily PA during one day with and one day without structured exercise. Quadriceps and hamstring muscle activity and inactivity using EMG shorts and acceleration by waist-mounted accelerometer were simultaneously measured and classified as sedentary, light, moderate and vigorous activity. Data from ACC was further analyzed using five different published cut-off points and varying time windows (1−60 s) for comparison with EMG. RESULTS: In the PA tasks ACC counts and EMG amplitude showed marked differences in swinging, trampoline jumping, crawling, static squat, single leg hops, standing long jump and jump for height, the difference being over 170% when signals were normalized to that during walking. Furthermore, in walking, swinging, trampoline jumping, stair negotiation and crawling ACC classified over 60% of the time as vigorous-intensity activity, while EMG indicated primarily light- and moderate-intensity activities. During both days with and without exercise, ACC resulted in greater proportion of light activity (p < 0.01) and smaller proportion of moderate activity compared to EMG (p < 0.05). The choice of cut-off points and epoch length in ACC analysis influenced the classification of PA level and sedentary time. In the analysis of daily activities the cut-off points by Evenson et al. (2008) with epochs of 7.5 s and 15 s yielded the smallest difference (less than 10% of recording time at each intensity) against EMG-derived PA levels. DISCUSSION: This research provides novel insight on muscle activity and thereby on neuromuscular loading of major locomotor muscles during normal daily activities of children. While EMG and ACC provided similar estimates of sedentary time in 13 typical PA tasks, duration of light, moderate and vigorous PA varied considerably between the methods especially during walking, stair negotiation, crawling, swinging and trampoline jumping. Evenson et al.’s (2008) cut-off points with ≤15 s epoch provided similar classification of PA than EMG during daily life. Compared to impacts recorded using ACC, EMG can provide understanding on children’s neuromuscular loading during motor tasks that is useful when studying effects of PA interventions on, and development of, motor competence and coordination.
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spelling pubmed-61083142018-08-28 Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level Gao, Ying Melin, Martti Mäkäräinen, Karoliina Rantalainen, Timo Pesola, Arto J. Laukkanen, Arto Sääkslahti, Arja Finni, Taija PeerJ Kinesiology BACKGROUND: This research compared accelerometry (ACC)-derived and muscle electromyography (EMG)-based estimates of physical activity (PA) and sedentary time in typical PA tasks and during the daily lives of children. METHODS: Data was included from two exploratory studies. In Study I, 6–7-year-old children (n = 11, 64% girls) were assessed for eight PA tasks (walking, stair negotiation, climbing, crawling, swinging, balancing, trampoline jumping and a game of tag). In Study II, 7–9-year-old children (n = 14, 38% girls) were assessed for six PA tasks (walking, sitting, static squat, single leg hops, jump for height and standing long jump), and daily PA during one day with and one day without structured exercise. Quadriceps and hamstring muscle activity and inactivity using EMG shorts and acceleration by waist-mounted accelerometer were simultaneously measured and classified as sedentary, light, moderate and vigorous activity. Data from ACC was further analyzed using five different published cut-off points and varying time windows (1−60 s) for comparison with EMG. RESULTS: In the PA tasks ACC counts and EMG amplitude showed marked differences in swinging, trampoline jumping, crawling, static squat, single leg hops, standing long jump and jump for height, the difference being over 170% when signals were normalized to that during walking. Furthermore, in walking, swinging, trampoline jumping, stair negotiation and crawling ACC classified over 60% of the time as vigorous-intensity activity, while EMG indicated primarily light- and moderate-intensity activities. During both days with and without exercise, ACC resulted in greater proportion of light activity (p < 0.01) and smaller proportion of moderate activity compared to EMG (p < 0.05). The choice of cut-off points and epoch length in ACC analysis influenced the classification of PA level and sedentary time. In the analysis of daily activities the cut-off points by Evenson et al. (2008) with epochs of 7.5 s and 15 s yielded the smallest difference (less than 10% of recording time at each intensity) against EMG-derived PA levels. DISCUSSION: This research provides novel insight on muscle activity and thereby on neuromuscular loading of major locomotor muscles during normal daily activities of children. While EMG and ACC provided similar estimates of sedentary time in 13 typical PA tasks, duration of light, moderate and vigorous PA varied considerably between the methods especially during walking, stair negotiation, crawling, swinging and trampoline jumping. Evenson et al.’s (2008) cut-off points with ≤15 s epoch provided similar classification of PA than EMG during daily life. Compared to impacts recorded using ACC, EMG can provide understanding on children’s neuromuscular loading during motor tasks that is useful when studying effects of PA interventions on, and development of, motor competence and coordination. PeerJ Inc. 2018-08-21 /pmc/articles/PMC6108314/ /pubmed/30155355 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5437 Text en ©2018 Gao et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Kinesiology
Gao, Ying
Melin, Martti
Mäkäräinen, Karoliina
Rantalainen, Timo
Pesola, Arto J.
Laukkanen, Arto
Sääkslahti, Arja
Finni, Taija
Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
title Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
title_full Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
title_fullStr Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
title_full_unstemmed Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
title_short Children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
title_sort children’s physical activity and sedentary time compared using assessments of accelerometry counts and muscle activity level
topic Kinesiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6108314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30155355
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5437
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