Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare the energy cost of completing mobility-related activities in chronic stroke to the estimated energy cost found in the compendium of physical activities, a resource that estimates and classifies energy cost of various human physical activities. Men (n=18) and women (n=10) with chronic hemiparetic gait (stroke latency: 4 ± 2 years, age: 60.4 ± 1.6 years, BMI: 31.5 ± 1.1 kg/m2) participated in the study. Portable energy cost monitoring (COSMED K4b2) was performed during five mobility activities of varying intensity to determine metabolic equivalents (METs, or oxygen consumption in multiples of resting level) for each activity. The METs achieved during the five activities were compared to the following compendium MET values for: 1) floor sweeping; 2) stepping in place; 3) over-ground walking; 4) lower speed treadmill walking (1.0 mph at 4% incline); and 5) higher speed treadmill walking (2.0 mph at 4% incline). Measurements were obtained for 10 min at rest and 5 minutes during each of the five activities. The energy cost of rest was only 85% of Compendium METS, while mobility-related activities were ~1.25-1.50 fold greater when measured in stroke vs. Compendium METS for all measures (P's<0.05), except floor sweeping, which was similar between groups. These data indicate that MET levels provided in the compendium are not applicable to chronic stroke survivors as they overestimate energy expenditure at rest and underestimate energy expenditure during physical activity, indicating poor efficiency in movement, thus elevating the oxygen cost of completing general daily activities.

Highlights

  • Three-quarters of all strokes, which are the leading cause of serious, long-term disability in the USA, occur in people over the age of 65 [1]

  • The measured energy cost of mobility-related activities was ~1.25–1.50 fold greater in stroke than compendium METS for all measures (P’s

  • Stepping in place represented the activity with the greatest difference between measured and compendium metabolic equivalents of task (MET)

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Summary

Introduction

Three-quarters of all strokes, which are the leading cause of serious, long-term disability in the USA, occur in people over the age of 65 [1]. Following a stroke, ~80% of individuals develop hemiparesis. Hemiparesis increases the energy cost of treadmill walking by 1.5–2.0-fold [2,3], which may result in physical inactivity and fatigue. Stroke survivors spend ~80% of the day spent performing sedentary activities [4]. Up to 70% of stroke survivors report chronic fatigue [5], which is associated with reduced physical functioning in stroke [6,7]. These data suggest value in understanding energy cost of daily activities common among stroke survivors

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