La. Talbot et al., Leisure-time physical activities and their relationship to cardiorespiratory fitness in healthy men and women 18-95 years old, MED SCI SPT, 32(2), 2000, pp. 417-425
Purpose: We examined leisure-time physical activities (LTPA) and their cont
ribution to peak oxygen consumption ((V) over dot O-2) in healthy men (N =
619) and women (N = 497) aged 18-95 yr (mean 51 +/- 17) who were participan
ts of thr Baltimore Longitudinal study of Aging. Methods: Calculations of L
TPA were based on the average self-reported rime spent performing 97 activi
ties and converted into MET-min 24 h(-1). The activities were divided into
three levels of LTPA based on absolute intensity. Peak (V) over dot O-2 det
ermined from a maximal treadmill exercise test. Results: Total LTPA was inv
ersely related to age in both sexes (r = -0.26, P < 0.0001 in men and r = -
0.23, P < 0.0001 in women), mediated primarily by less high-intensity activ
ities in older subjects, with only minor differences in moderate- and low-i
ntensity activities across age. Peak (V) over dot O-2 correlated positively
with LTPA; the correlations were strongest for high-intensity LTPA (r = 0.
33 in men and 0.27 in women, each P < 0.0001), intermediate for moderate-in
tensity activity (r = 0.12, P < 0.004 in men and r = 0.17, P < 0.0001 in wo
men) and minimal for low-intensity activity (r = 0.08, P = 0.05 in men and
r = 0.06, P = 0.20 in women). On univariate analysis, total LTPA accounted
for 12.9% of peak (V) over dot O-2 variance for men and 10.6% for women. By
multivariate analysis, LTPA independently accounted for 1.6% of the peak (
V) over dot O-2 variance in men and 1.86 in women after controlling for age
and body mass index. Conclusions: In healthy adults across a broad age ran
ge, LTPA is a relatively minor independent contributor to aerobic capacity.