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. 2008 Sep;89(9):1765-71.
doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2008.02.027.

Measuring free-living physical activity in adults with and without neurologic dysfunction with a triaxial accelerometer

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Measuring free-living physical activity in adults with and without neurologic dysfunction with a triaxial accelerometer

Leigh A Hale et al. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2008 Sep.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the reliability, validity, and utility of a triaxial accelerometer to measure physical activity in the free-living environment in adults with and without neurologic dysfunction.

Design: Repeated-measures design.

Setting: General community.

Participants: Volunteer sample of 17 men and 30 women (age range, 28-91y) living in the community with stroke of greater than 6 months in duration (n=20), Parkinson disease (n=7), or multiple sclerosis (n=11), and healthy but sedentary controls (n=9).

Interventions: Not applicable.

Main outcome measures: Physical activity measured with the TriTrac RT3 accelerometer, 7-day recall questionnaire, and activity diary.

Results: The accelerometer reliably measured free-living physical activity (intraclass correlation coefficient, .85; 95% confidence interval, .74-.91; P=.000). The standard error of measurement indicated that a second test would differ from a baseline test by +/-23%. Mean daily RT3 data collected in the first 3 days differed significantly from that of the mean daily RT3 data collected over 7 days. The RT3 appeared to distinguish level of mobility better than the 7-day recall questionnaire, and participants found the RT3 to be a user-friendly and acceptable measure of physical activity.

Conclusions: The triaxial accelerometer provided a stable measure of free-living physical activity, was found to distinguish between people with varying levels of mobility, and was well tolerated by participants. The results indicate that collecting data for 3 days was not reflective of data collected over 7 days.

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