Literature DB >> 34648723

Association of Physical Activity and Sedentary Time with Cardio-Autonomic Regulation in Women.

Abdullah Bandar Alansare1, Bethany Barone Gibbs2, Janet M Catov3, J Richard Jennings4, Christopher E Kline2, Elizabeth Nagle2, Claudia Holzman5.   

Abstract

Background: Low moderate-to-vigorous-intensity physical activity (MVPA) and high sedentary time (ST) may contribute to cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk in women, perhaps via cardiac autonomic dysregulation. We examined associations of total, leisure, and occupational MVPA and ST with cardiac autonomic regulation in women.
Methods: Data were from 522 women (age = 37.7 ± 5.7 years; 59%white) who participated in the follow-up study of the Pregnancy Outcomes and Community Health Study (between 2011 and 2014). MVPA and ST (hours/day) were self-reported using the Modifiable Activity Questionnaire. Cardiac autonomic regulation was assessed by calculating heart rate variability (HRV) indices (resting heart rate, natural logarithm standard deviation of normal R-R intervals; lnSDNN [total variability], natural logarithm root mean square of the successive differences; lnRMSSD [cardiac parasympathetic activity]) with Kubios software from a 5-minute, seated electrocardiogram. Progressive generalized linear models evaluated associations of total, leisure, and occupational MVPA and ST with HRV indices while adjusting for confounders (demographics, health-related factors), and then potential mediators (clinical variables). A final model evaluated the relationship between ST and HRV stratified by MVPA level.
Results: Adjusting for confounders, total and leisure MVPA were associated with favorable lnSDNN (B = 0.027 [p = 0.014] and B = 0.074 [p = 0.009], respectively) and lnRMSSD (B = 0.036 [p = 0.015] and B = 0.075 [p = 0.043], respectively). Adjustment for mediators tended to strengthen the observed significant associations. No associations were found between occupational MVPA or any ST measure with HRV indices (p > 0.05). Neither MVPA nor ST were associated with heart rate. When stratified by MVPA level, leisure ST was associated with unfavorable lnRMSSD (B = -0.041, [p = 0.042]) only among women who did not meet leisure MVPA recommendations.
Conclusion: Cardiac autonomic dysregulation may be a mechanism through which low leisure MVPA and, among low-active women, high leisure ST contribute to CVD risk among women.

Entities:  

Keywords:  autonomic regulation; heart rate variability; leisure time; occupational time; physical activity; sedentary time

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34648723      PMCID: PMC9063150          DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2021.0243

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)        ISSN: 1540-9996            Impact factor:   3.017


  38 in total

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5.  Device-Measured Sedentary Behavior Patterns in Office-Based University Employees.

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8.  Association of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes With Hypertension 2 to 7 Years Postpartum.

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Review 10.  Heart-rate variability: a biomarker to study the influence of nutrition on physiological and psychological health?

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