TY - JOUR
T1 - Identifying factors associated with sedentary time after stroke. Secondary analysis of pooled data from nine primary studies.
AU - Hendrickx, Wendy
AU - Riveros, Carlos
AU - Askim, Torunn
AU - Bussmann, Johannes B.J.
AU - Callisaya, Michele L.
AU - Chastin, Sebastien F.M.
AU - Dean, Catherine M.
AU - Ezeugwu, Victor E.
AU - Jones, Taryn M.
AU - Kuys, Suzanne S.
AU - Mahendran, Niruthikha
AU - Manns, Trish J.
AU - Mead, Gillian
AU - Moore, Sarah A.
AU - Paul, Lorna
AU - Pisters, Martijn F.
AU - Saunders, David H.
AU - Simpson, Dawn B.
AU - Tieges, Zoë
AU - Verschuren, Olaf
AU - English, Coralie
N1 - Funding Information: Associate Professor English was supported by National Heart Foundation Future Leaders Fellowship (2017-2020), under Grant [number: 101177]. Ezeugwu was supported by the Alberta Innovates Clinician Fellowship Award, under Grant [number 201600292], the Clinical Research Innovation Fund, and the Physiotherapy Foundation of Canada through the ACWMS.
PY - 2019/7/4
Y1 - 2019/7/4
N2 - Background: High levels of sedentary time increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, including recurrent stroke. Objective: This study aimed to identify factors associated with high sedentary time in community-dwelling people with stroke. Methods: For this data pooling study, authors of published and ongoing trials that collected sedentary time data, using the activPAL monitor, in community-dwelling people with stroke were invited to contribute their raw data. The data was reprocessed, algorithms were created to identify sleep-wake time and determine the percentage of waking hours spent sedentary. We explored demographic and stroke-related factors associated with total sedentary time and time in uninterrupted sedentary bouts using unique, both univariable and multivariable, regression analyses. Results: The 274 included participants were from Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, and spent, on average, 69% (SD 12.4) of their waking hours sedentary. Of the demographic and stroke-related factors, slower walking speeds were significantly and independently associated with a higher percentage of waking hours spent sedentary (p = 0.001) and uninterrupted sedentary bouts of >30 and >60 min (p = 0.001 and p = 0.004, respectively). Regression models explained 11–19% of the variance in total sedentary time and time in prolonged sedentary bouts. Conclusion: We found that variability in sedentary time of people with stroke was largely unaccounted for by demographic and stroke-related variables. Behavioral and environmental factors are likely to play an important role in sedentary behavior after stroke. Further work is required to develop and test effective interventions to address sedentary behavior after stroke.
AB - Background: High levels of sedentary time increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, including recurrent stroke. Objective: This study aimed to identify factors associated with high sedentary time in community-dwelling people with stroke. Methods: For this data pooling study, authors of published and ongoing trials that collected sedentary time data, using the activPAL monitor, in community-dwelling people with stroke were invited to contribute their raw data. The data was reprocessed, algorithms were created to identify sleep-wake time and determine the percentage of waking hours spent sedentary. We explored demographic and stroke-related factors associated with total sedentary time and time in uninterrupted sedentary bouts using unique, both univariable and multivariable, regression analyses. Results: The 274 included participants were from Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, and spent, on average, 69% (SD 12.4) of their waking hours sedentary. Of the demographic and stroke-related factors, slower walking speeds were significantly and independently associated with a higher percentage of waking hours spent sedentary (p = 0.001) and uninterrupted sedentary bouts of >30 and >60 min (p = 0.001 and p = 0.004, respectively). Regression models explained 11–19% of the variance in total sedentary time and time in prolonged sedentary bouts. Conclusion: We found that variability in sedentary time of people with stroke was largely unaccounted for by demographic and stroke-related variables. Behavioral and environmental factors are likely to play an important role in sedentary behavior after stroke. Further work is required to develop and test effective interventions to address sedentary behavior after stroke.
KW - cardiovascular diseases
KW - determinants
KW - factors
KW - sedentary behavior
KW - sedentary bouts
KW - sedentary time
KW - sitting time
KW - Stroke
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85065066050&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10749357.2019.1601419
DO - 10.1080/10749357.2019.1601419
M3 - Article
C2 - 31025908
AN - SCOPUS:85065066050
SN - 1074-9357
VL - 26
SP - 327
EP - 334
JO - Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation
JF - Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation
IS - 5
ER -