Accelerometer Measured Sedentary and Physical Activity Behaviors of Working Patients after Total Knee Arthroplasty, and their Compensation Between Occupational and Leisure Time

Sep 18, 2020Journal of occupational rehabilitation

Sedentary and Active Behaviors Measured by Accelerometer in Working Patients After Knee Replacement and How They Balance Activity at Work and Leisure

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Abstract

Participants spent 60% of their time in sedentary bouts one year after total knee arthroplasty.

  • Seventeen percent of the time was spent in prolonged sedentary bouts (≥ 30 min).
  • Thirty-seven percent of physical activity was at light intensity, with only 3% at moderate-to-vigorous levels.
  • About 70% of patients met the guideline of more than 150 minutes of per week.
  • Workers in physical jobs compensated for occupational light-intensity activity with reduced leisure-time light-intensity activity.
  • Workers in non-physical jobs did not reduce their prolonged sedentary bouts during leisure time.

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Key numbers

60.1%
Sedentary Time
Percentage of total wearing time spent sedentary during the week.
36 of 51
Patients Meeting PA Guidelines
Number of patients meeting the guideline of at least 150 min per week.
16.5%
Prolonged Sedentary Bouts
Percentage of total wearing time spent in prolonged sedentary bouts of at least 30 min.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research assesses sedentary and physical activity (PA) behaviors in working-age patients after total knee arthroplasty (TKA).
  • Using accelerometers, it measures time spent sedentary and in various intensities of PA.
  • The study also explores compensation effects between occupational and leisure time activities among these patients.

Essence

  • Working-age TKA patients spend a majority of their time sedentarily one year post-surgery, yet 70% meet recommended PA guidelines. Those in physical jobs compensate for occupational light-intensity PA with less leisure-time activity, while those in non-physical jobs do not compensate for prolonged sedentary bouts.

Key takeaways

  • Patients spent 60% of their time sedentary, with 17% in prolonged sedentary bouts. This indicates a high level of among TKA patients one year after surgery.
  • Approximately 70% of participants met the PA guideline of at least 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous PA per week. This suggests that a significant portion of patients are engaging in sufficient physical activity.
  • Compensation effects were observed: workers in physical jobs reduced leisure-time light-intensity PA, while those in non-physical jobs did not adjust their prolonged during leisure time. This highlights different patterns of activity compensation based on job type.

Caveats

  • The study's small sample size limits the generalizability of the findings, particularly regarding levels.
  • The reliance on a widely used cut-off point for may not fully capture individual variations in activity levels.
  • The accelerometers did not record swimming activities, potentially underestimating overall PA levels.

Definitions

  • Sedentary behavior: Periods of low physical activity, typically defined as less than 100 counts per minute on accelerometers.
  • Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA): Physical activity that raises heart rate and breathing, categorized as 1952 counts per minute or higher on accelerometers.

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