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Cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with hard and light intensity physical activity but not time spent sedentary in 10-14 year old schoolchildren: the HAPPY study

  • Sarah J. Denton
    ,
  • Michael I. Trenell
    ,
  • Thomas Plötz
    ,
  • Louise A. Savory
    ,
  • Daniel Bailey
    ,
  • Catherine J. Kerr
  • University of Bedfordshire
    ,
  • Newcastle University
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Open access

Abstract

Background Sedentary behaviour is a major risk factor for developing chronic diseases and is associated with low cardiorespiratory fitness in adults. It remains unclear how sedentary behaviour and different physical activity subcomponents are related to cardiorespiratory fitness in children. The purpose of this study was to assess how sedentary behaviour and different physical activity subcomponents are associated with 10–14 year-old schoolchildren's cardiorespiratory fitness. Methods 135 schoolchildren (81 girls, 12±1 year) completed 7-day minute-by-minute habitual physical activity monitoring using triaxial accelerometers and undertook a maximal cardiorespiratory fitness test. Results After controlling for sex, age, ethnicity, socioeconomic status and total wear time, light physical activity (1.5–2.9 METs) was negatively associated (β = −.24, p<.01) and hard physical activity (≥9 METs) positively associated (β = .45, p<.001) with cardiorespiratory fitness. Vigorous and hard physical activity were associated with cardiorespiratory fitness for boys (F = 5.64, p<.01) whereas light, moderate and hard physical activity were associated with physical fitness for girls (F = 10.23, p<.001). No association was found between sedentary time and cardiorespiratory fitness (r = −.13, p>.05). Sedentary to active transitions revealed little variability between cardiorespiratory fitness tertiles. Conclusions Hard physical activity (≥9 METs) holds greater potential for cardiorespiratory fitness compared to physical activity of lower intensities. There was no relationship between sedentary behaviour and cardiorespiratory fitness. These findings suggest that, for children, advice should focus on higher intensity physical activity and not sedentary behaviour as a means to maintain or improve cardiorespiratory fitness. Future research should explore longitudinal relationships between hard physical activity, cardiorespiratory fitness and health parameters.

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Original language

English

Article number

e61073

Journal (Volume, Issue Number)

PLoS ONE (Volume 8, Issue 4)

Publication milestones

  • Accepted/In press - 05/03/2013
  • Published - 05/04/2013

Publication status

Published - 05/04/2013

External Publication IDs

  • handle.net: 10547/295126
  • Scopus: 84875939500