Leah M Schumacher1, J Graham Thomas1, Sivamainthan Vithiananthan2, Jennifer Webster1, Daniel B Jones3, Dale S Bond4. 1. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center, The Miriam Hospital/Brown Alpert Medical School, Providence, Rhode Island. 2. Department of Surgery, The Miriam Hospital/Brown Alpert Medical School, Providence, Rhode Island. 3. Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts. 4. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center, The Miriam Hospital/Brown Alpert Medical School, Providence, Rhode Island. Electronic address: dbond@lifespan.org.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bariatric surgery patients spend much of their waking time sedentary. Yet, little is known about their patterns of accumulation of sedentary time (ST) and whether more prolonged ST is associated with lower physical activity (PA), independent of total ST, or obesity severity. OBJECTIVES: To characterize variability in prolonged ST among bariatric patients preoperatively and assess the importance of a "prolonger" pattern in relation to PA and weight status. SETTING: Two university hospital clinics, United States. METHODS: Adult patients (n = 76) wore a wrist-based accelerometer for 10 days preoperatively. ST and time spent in light and moderate-to-vigorous PA was determined using validated thresholds. Percent of total ST accumulated in ≥30-consecutive ST minute bouts was calculated, and participants were trichotomized into low, medium, and high "prolongers" based on this value. The associations of prolonged ST with PA and obesity were examined. RESULTS: On average, participants accumulated a mean ± standard deviation of 10.5 ± 2.1 hours of ST per day, 30% of which was prolonged (prolonger groups: low = 7.2%-24.5%, medium = 24.5%-33.0%, and high = 34.0%-52.6% of ST in ≥30-min bouts). Adjusting for covariates including total ST, high prolongers had fewer light PA minutes per day (P < .01), and a greater percentage of prolonged ST related to lower likelihood of meeting the national guideline of ≥150 moderate-to-vigorous PA minutes per week (P = .012). High (versus low) prolongers had more severe obesity (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: Accumulating a greater percentage of ST in prolonged bouts appears to be adversely related to PA and obesity severity among bariatric patients. Future research should determine whether interrupting prolonged ST with brief breaks can favorably modify PA and weight in this population.
BACKGROUND: Bariatric surgery patients spend much of their waking time sedentary. Yet, little is known about their patterns of accumulation of sedentary time (ST) and whether more prolonged ST is associated with lower physical activity (PA), independent of total ST, or obesity severity. OBJECTIVES: To characterize variability in prolonged ST among bariatric patients preoperatively and assess the importance of a "prolonger" pattern in relation to PA and weight status. SETTING: Two university hospital clinics, United States. METHODS: Adult patients (n = 76) wore a wrist-based accelerometer for 10 days preoperatively. ST and time spent in light and moderate-to-vigorous PA was determined using validated thresholds. Percent of total ST accumulated in ≥30-consecutive ST minute bouts was calculated, and participants were trichotomized into low, medium, and high "prolongers" based on this value. The associations of prolonged ST with PA and obesity were examined. RESULTS: On average, participants accumulated a mean ± standard deviation of 10.5 ± 2.1 hours of ST per day, 30% of which was prolonged (prolonger groups: low = 7.2%-24.5%, medium = 24.5%-33.0%, and high = 34.0%-52.6% of ST in ≥30-min bouts). Adjusting for covariates including total ST, high prolongers had fewer light PA minutes per day (P < .01), and a greater percentage of prolonged ST related to lower likelihood of meeting the national guideline of ≥150 moderate-to-vigorous PA minutes per week (P = .012). High (versus low) prolongers had more severe obesity (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: Accumulating a greater percentage of ST in prolonged bouts appears to be adversely related to PA and obesity severity among bariatric patients. Future research should determine whether interrupting prolonged ST with brief breaks can favorably modify PA and weight in this population.
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