Abstract

BackgroundExercise training is crucial for maintaining physical and mental health in aging populations. However, as people participate in structured exercise training, they tend to behaviorally compensate by decreasing their non-exercise physical activity, thus potentially blunting the benefits of the training program. Furthermore, physical activity of older adults is substantially influenced by physical feelings such as fatigue. Nevertheless, how older people react to day-to-day fluctuations of fatigue and whether fatigue plays a role in non-exercise physical activity compensation is not known. Thus, the purpose of this study was twofold: (1) To explore whether the volume and intensity of habitual physical activity in older adults were affected by morning fatigue. (2) To investigate the effect of attending power and resistance exercise sessions on the levels of non-exercise physical activity later that day and the following day.MethodsTwenty-eight older adults wore an accelerometer during a 4-week low-volume, low-intensity resistance and power training program with three exercise sessions per week and for 3 weeks preceding and 1 week following the program. During the same period, the participants were prompted every morning, using text messages, to rate their momentary fatigue on a scale from 0 to 10.ResultsGreater morning fatigue was associated with lower volume (p = 0.002) and intensity (p = 0.017) of daily physical activity. Specifically, one point greater on the fatigue scale was associated with 3.2 min (SE 1.0) less moderate-to-vigorous physical activity. Furthermore, attending an exercise session was associated with less moderate-to-vigorous physical activity later that day by 3.7 min (SE 1.9, p = 0.049) compared to days without an exercise session. During the next day, the volume of physical activity was greater, but only in participants with a body mass index up to 23 (p = 0.008).ConclusionsFollowing low-volume exercise sessions, fit and healthy older adults decreased their non-exercise physical activity later that day, but this compensation did not carry over into the next day. As momentary morning fatigue negatively affects daily physical activity, we suggest that the state level of fatigue should be monitored during intensive exercise programs, especially in less fit older adults with increased fatigability.

Highlights

  • Exercise training is crucial for maintaining physical and mental health in aging populations

  • As momentary morning fatigue negatively affects daily physical activity, we suggest that the state level of fatigue should be monitored during intensive exercise programs, especially in less fit older adults with increased fatigability

  • As early as the 1990s, researchers noticed that as people participate in structured exercise training, they tend to behaviorally compensate by decreasing their non-exercise Physical activity (PA) (NEPA) [7, 8]

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Summary

Introduction

Exercise training is crucial for maintaining physical and mental health in aging populations. Physical activity (PA) and exercise are crucial for maintaining physical and mental health in aging populations [1,2,3], and various exercise interventions have been shown to increase physical fitness, function, and wellbeing of older adults [4,5,6]. Most of the studies where NEPA compensation was not present were not designed to detect short-term withinsubject changes in NEPA, which may occur on a day-today basis and could accumulate into clinically meaningful changes. It is not clear whether aerobic and resistance training have the same effect on NEPA. Earlier studies [13, 14] indicated that older adults may be more susceptible to the negative effect of exercise training on NEPA

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