Associations between appetite, physical activity and sedentary behaviour from hip‐ and wrist‐worn accelerometers in community‐dwelling older adults

Author:

Tsai Li‐Tang12ORCID,Boyle Eleanor3,Buhl Sussi F4,Kock Gry5,Brønd Jan C6,Visser Marjolein78,Mendonça Nuno9,Shiroma Eric J10,Caserotti Paolo11

Affiliation:

1. Research Unit for ORL—Head and Neck Surgery and Audiology Odense University Hospital Odense Denmark

2. Department of Clinical Research University of Southern Denmark Odense Denmark

3. Clinical Biomechanics Unit, Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics University of Southern Denmark Odense Denmark

4. Research Unit of General Practice, Department of Public Health University of Southern Denmark Odense Denmark

5. Steno Diabetes Centre Odense Odense University Hospital Odense Denmark

6. Centre of Research in Childhood Health, Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics University of Southern Denmark Odense Denmark

7. Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute Vrije University Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

8. Department of Internal Medicine, Nutrition and Dietetics VU University Medical Center Amsterdam The Netherlands

9. EpiDoC Unit, CHRC, NOVA Medical School NOVA University Lisbon Lisbon Portugal

10. Laboratory of Epidemiology and Population Sciences National Institute on Aging Baltimore Maryland USA

11. Center for Active and Healthy Ageing, Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics University of Southern Denmark Odense Denmark

Abstract

AimThe objective of the current study was to examine whether physical activity and sedentary behavior were associated with appetite among community‐dwelling older adults.MethodsCross‐sectional analysis was performed on three cohort studies: the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA); the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study (HABC Study) and the I'm Still Standing Study (ISS Study); (n = 1173, n = 162, n = 125; age range: 57–99, 85–95, 80–100 years; women: 51%, 56%, 61%, respectively). Physical activity and sedentary behavior were measured using hip‐worn (LASA and HABC) and wrist‐worn (ISS) accelerometers. Appetite was self‐reported. Logistic regression models were fitted by accelerometer placement to explore the association between good appetite and various physical activity metrics (total activity, sedentary behavior, and time spent in different intensities of physical activity).ResultsAmong cohorts using hip‐worn accelerometers, those having total activity within the highest tertile had more than double the odds of having good appetite compared with those within the lowest tertile (odds ratio [OR] 2.16 (1.15–4.06)). Each additional percent of daily sedentary behavior decreased the odds for having good appetite by 3% (OR 0.97 (0.95–0.996)), while each additional percent of daily light‐intensity physical activity increased the odds for having good appetite by 4% (OR 1.02 (1.01–1.06)). No association was found between either physical activity or sedentary behavior and appetite for measurements with the wrist‐worn accelerometers.ConclusionsAmong community‐dwelling older adults, the associations between appetite, accelerometer‐assessed physical activity and sedentary behavior differ by accelerometer placement location. This study highlights the importance of careful interpretation of accelerometer data from different body locations and concurrent health outcomes. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2023; 23: 411–417.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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