Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of intermittent activity performed at varying intensities and of prolonged sitting on physical activity compensation. A total of 33 children (14 boys and 19 girls; age 7-11y; 24% overweight/obese; 61% nonwhite) completed 4 experimental conditions in random order: 8 hours of sitting interrupted with 20two-minute low-, moderate-, or high-intensity activity breaks or 20two-minute sedentary computer game breaks. Physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE) was assessed via accelerometry to establish baseline PAEE and throughout each condition day (8-h in-lab PAEE, out-of-lab PAEE, and 3-d postcondition). Compared with baseline PAEE, total daily PAEE was significantly higher during the high-intensity condition day (153 ± 43kcal, P = .03), unchanged during the low-intensity (-40 ± 23kcal, P > .05) and moderate-intensity condition days (-11 ± 18kcal, P > .05), and decreased in response to prolonged sitting (-79 ± 22kcal, P = .03). There were no significant differences in PAEE 3-day postcondition across conditions (P > .05). Despite the varying levels of PAEE accumulated during the 8-hour laboratory conditions, out-of-lab PAEE during each condition day and 3-day postcondition did not change from the baseline. These findings provide preliminary evidence that spontaneous physical activity in children does not change in response to intermittent activity or prolonged sitting.
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