Effects of reducing sedentary behavior on cardiorespiratory fitness in adults with metabolic syndrome: A 6‐month RCT

Author:

Norha Jooa1ORCID,Sjöros Tanja1,Garthwaite Taru1ORCID,Laine Saara1,Saarenhovi Maria2,Kallio Petri2,Laitinen Kirsi3,Houttu Noora3,Vähä‐Ypyä Henri4,Sievänen Harri4,Löyttyniemi Eliisa5,Vasankari Tommi46ORCID,Knuuti Juhani1,Kalliokoski Kari K.1ORCID,Heinonen Ilkka H. A.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Turku PET Centre University of Turku and Turku University Hospital Turku Finland

2. Department of Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine University of Turku and Turku University Hospital Turku Finland

3. Institute of Biomedicine University of Turku Turku Finland

4. The UKK Institute for Health Promotion Research Tampere Finland

5. Department of Biostatistics University of Turku Turku Finland

6. Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology Tampere University Tampere Finland

7. Rydberg Laboratory of Applied Sciences University of Halmstad Halmstad Sweden

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionPoor cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is associated with adverse health outcomes. Previous observational and cross‐sectional studies have suggested that reducing sedentary behavior (SB) might improve CRF. Therefore, we investigated the effects of a 6‐month intervention of reducing SB on CRF in 64 sedentary inactive adults with metabolic syndrome in a non‐blind randomized controlled trial.Materials and MethodsIn the intervention group (INT, n = 33), the aim was to reduce SB by 1 h/day for 6 months without increasing exercise training. Control group (CON, n = 31) was instructed to maintain their habitual SB and physical activity. Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) was measured by maximal graded bicycle ergometer test with respiratory gas measurements. Physical activity and SB were measured during the whole intervention using accelerometers.ResultsReduction in SB did not improve VO2max statistically significantly (group × time p > 0.05). Maximal absolute power output (Wmax) did not improve significantly but increased in INT compared to CON when scaled to fat free mass (FFM) (at 6 months INT 1.54 [95% CI: 1.41, 1.67] vs. CON 1.45 [1.32, 1.59] Wmax/kgFFM, p = 0.036). Finally, the changes in daily step count correlated positively with the changes in VO2max scaled to body mass and FFM (r = 0.31 and 0.30, respectively, p < 0.05).DiscussionReducing SB without adding exercise training does not seem to improve VO2max in adults with metabolic syndrome. However, succeeding in increasing daily step count may increase VO2max.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Diabetestutkimussäätiö

Juho Vainion Säätiö

Päivikki ja Sakari Sohlbergin Säätiö

Suomen Kulttuurirahasto

Yrjö Jahnssonin Säätiö

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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