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Impact of supervised aerobic exercise training on habitual physical activity in healthy older adults: the Hertfordshire physical activity randomised controlled trial.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Physical activity is important for health, but the influence of structured, supervised aerobic exercise sessions on habitual physical activity in healthy older adults is unclear. METHODS: We evaluated habitual physical activity in the Hertfordshire Physical Activity Trial, where healthy older adults were randomised to 36 supervised 1-hour gymnasium sessions on a cycle ergometer at moderate intensity over 12 weeks or to a control group with no intervention. We estimated physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE) and time spent in sedentary behaviour and light and moderate or vigorous physical activity over 7 days at three time points (before, during and immediately after the intervention) with individually calibrated combined heart rate and movement sensing. RESULTS: Of 100 randomised participants (44% female, aged 67-76 years), 96% completed follow-up. Midway through the intervention, neither overall PAEE nor time spent at different intensities were different between groups. However, on the 3 days of the week that the structured exercise sessions occurred (Monday, Wednesday, Friday), the exercise group had a 9.1 kJ kg-1 day-1 ((2.5, 15.7), p=0.007) increase in PAEE, a reduction in sedentary time and increased time spent at light and moderate or vigorous physical activity, compared with the control group. CONCLUSIONS: Three 1-hour bouts per week of structured aerobic exercise increased daily physical activity on the days they occurred, but not overall physical activity across the whole week. Population-wide strategies such as better cycling and walking infrastructure may increase physical activity in healthy older adults more effectively than treatment with structured exercise programmes. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN60986572.

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Peer reviewed: True


Acknowledgements: We are grateful to the staff at the Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Department of Clinical Biochemistry and the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Core Biochemical Assay Laboratory (CBAL), where all of the blood samples for the study were analysed. We are also grateful to the field epidemiology, study coordination, physical activity technical team and data management teams from the MRC Epidemiology Unit for assistance with this study. In particular, we would like to acknowledge the important contributions made by Ken Horton (deceased) and Jessica Horton to this study. We would also like to thank Mike Kershaw and the staff of Fitness Connections gymnasium in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, for accommodating the study. We are extremely grateful to the study participants for making this work possible.


Publication status: Published


Funder: National Health Service East of England Clinical Academic Reserve

Journal Title

BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med

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Journal ISSN

2055-7647
2055-7647

Volume Title

11

Publisher

BMJ

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
MRC (MC_UU_00006/4)