| Literature DB >> 25075347 |
Michelle N McDonnell1, Adrian J Esterman2, Rosena S Williams1, Jenny Walker3, Shylie F Mackintosh1.
Abstract
Background. Physical inactivity is a powerful risk factor for stroke and other chronic diseases. The aim of this study was to explore physical activity habits and preferences in the month leading up to a first-ever stroke, and to determine whether participants were aware of the link between stroke and physical activity. Methods. We undertook an observational study with 81 participants recently admitted to a stroke unit. Participants reported their pre-morbid physical activity preferences and habits and completed the Barriers to Physical Activity and Disability Survey. Data were analysed with summative content analysis and descriptive statistics. Results. Only 31% of participants were aware that physical inactivity was associated with stroke. Most participants defined physical activity with examples of instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) and walking (48% of responses), and IADLs constituted their most frequent regular physical activity (38% of responses). The barriers to physical activity reported by participants most frequently were lack of motivation (52%), lack of interest (50%) and lack of energy (42%). Conclusions. Regular physical activity is important to prevent stroke and other chronic diseases but adults at risk of stroke have little awareness of the risks of physical inactivity and little motivation to undertake regular exercise.Entities:
Keywords: Physical activity; Primary prevention; Risk factor; Stroke
Year: 2014 PMID: 25075347 PMCID: PMC4103086 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Demographic characteristics of participants.
| Sex | 54M, 27F |
| Age (mean, SD) | 67.6 ± 13.2 |
| Days since stroke (median, range) | 6 (1–30) |
| Stroke type, infarct ( | 56 (69%) |
| Stroke location, cortical stroke ( | 44 (54%) |
| Stroke risk factors ( | |
| Hypertension | 53 (65%) |
| Diabetes | 16 (20%) |
| Current smoker | 21 (26%) |
| Hypercholesterolaemia | 28 (35%) |
| Previous TIA | 7 (9%) |
| Cardiac complications | 34 (42%) |
| Number of other comorbidities | 3.8 (1–10) |
Notes.
Cardiac complications included, but were not limited to, ischaemic heart disease, myocardial infarct, coronary artery bypass grafts, heart failure, permanent pacemaker, atrial fibrillation, cardiomyopathy, congestive cardiac failure.
Other comorbidities included, but were not limited to, depression, emphysema, rheumatoid arthritis, joint replacements, hypothyroidism, obesity, diabetes, renal failure, anaemia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Physical activity levels in the month prior to stroke.
| Question: Over the past month, did you do anything | Number of codes identified | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Walking | 43, 30% |
| IADLs e.g., shopping, work | 54, 38% | |
| Regular exercise e.g., gym, | 25, 18% | |
|
| Unable to (too hot, recently unwell) | 19, 14% |
Figure 1Proportion of responses to the question “How do you view the link between stroke and PA” coded as: PA can cause a stroke (3%), they are unrelated (25%), PA reduces stroke risk (31%) or no awareness stroke of a link (no idea) (41%).
Definition of PA.
| Question: “What would you define as physical activity?” | Number of codes identified |
|---|---|
| 1. Walking for exercise | 57, 26% |
| 2. IADL related | 47, 22% |
| 3. When prompted for examples then sport mostly | 51, 23% |
| 4. Egocentric, what | 26, 12% |
| 5. Physiological definition | 37, 17% |
Self-reported barriers to physical activity prior to a first-ever stroke, according to the Barriers to Physical Activity and Disability Survey.
| Barrier | % of participants |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Lack of motivation | 58 |
| Lack of interest | 50 |
| Lack of energy | 42 |
| Exercise is boring or monotonous | 42 |
| Lack of time | 40 |
| Pain prevents me from exercising | 31 |
| Health concerns prevent me from exercising | 29 |
|
| |
| Cost of the program | 36 |
| Lack of transportation | 26 |
| Not aware of fitness centre in the area | 23 |
| Don’t feel trainer in facility is able to help | 18 |