Publications by authors named "MONTOYE H"

The validity and reliability of occupational physical activity data from survey instruments were determined in 75 men and women (age 23 to 59 years) in white-collar jobs. Data were validated against measures of cardiorespiratory fitness, body fatness, motion detection, pulmonary function, and 12 days of occupational physical activity records. More than 90% of occupational physical activity was spent in light-intensity sitting, standing, and walking.

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A coding scheme is presented for classifying physical activity by rate of energy expenditure, i.e., by intensity.

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The purpose of this study was to determine how many days subjects should be monitored to provide an estimate of habitual physical activity in employed men engaged in a wide range of occupations. Caloric intake, movement recorders (accelerometers and pedometers), and heart rate were the measurements studied in 30 subjects who were monitored during their waking hours for 7 continuous days. A repeated measures ANOVA showed no significant difference between days (P > 0.

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The history of exercise science reveals that at least three scientists received the Nobel prize for investigations in exercise physiology. The work of these men and their contemporaries was concerned with physiological mechanisms and work performance, not directly with health. Hippocrates and other physicians and philosophers of the ancient world believed that regular physical activity contributed to health and longevity.

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This is a report of our experience using the Uniq Heart Watch for recording the heart rate in epidemiologic settings. Relatively few heart rates are missed during occupational and leisure activities. However the mean daily heart rate among subjects is somewhat variable so that several week days and Saturday and Sunday should be monitored to obtain a representative daily average.

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A longitudinal study was conducted on 398 athletes and 369 nonathletes who were born before 1920 and attended Michigan State University. The subjects were compared to determine if intercollegiate athletic competition accounts for significant variation in longevity when considered with somatotype. Because some of the subjects were still alive at the time of the study, the BMDP Statistical Software was used to do a survival analysis with covariates.

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This study examined the accuracy of a new device (Caltrac) in estimating energy expenditure via acceleration measurements. Energy expenditure of 20 high school students during basketball class activity (average length = 37 min) was estimated using the Caltrac, heart rate recording, and video analysis. Heart rate recording and video analysis estimates of energy expenditure were determined from heart rate, caloric expenditure curves, and an activity rating scale, respectively.

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The purpose of the investigation was to determine the validity of a portable vertical accelerometer and a Large-Scale Integrated Motor Activity Monitor (LSI) for estimating energy expenditure in riding a bicycle at various velocities. Instrument placement was either at the knee or ankle. Energy consumption, i.

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Oxygen uptake (VO2) was measured in males age 10-59 while they walked at 3 mph at various grades on a motor-driven treadmill. The number of subjects in each age group was as follows: age 10-11, N = 24; age 12-13, N = 46; age 14-15, N = 55; age 16-17, N = 53; age 18-19, N = 30; age 20-24, N = 56; age 25-29, N = 35; age 30-34, N = 32; age 35-39, N = 99; age 40-44, N = 106; age 45-49, N = 78; age 50-54, N = 42; and age 55-59, N = 11. Subjects walked at 3 mph at 0% grade for 3 min; thereafter, the treadmill was raised 3% every third minute with speed maintained.

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To improve health and fitness effectively through physical activity or exercise, we need to understand how this comes about. For many of these changes, the stimulus has been grossly defined in terms of type, intensity, duration, and frequency of exercise, but for others a dose-response relationship has not been determined. Physical activity that appears to provide the most diverse health benefits consists of dynamic, rhythmical contractions of large muscles that transport the body over distance or against gravity at a moderate intensity relative to capacity for extended periods of time during which 200 to 400 kilocalories (or 4 kilocalories per kilogram of body weight) are expended.

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More than 30 different methods have been used to assess physical activity. These methods can be grouped into seven major categories: calorimetry, job classification, survey procedures, physiological markers, behavioral observation, mechanical and electronic monitors, and dietary measures. No single instrument fulfills the criteria of being valid, reliable, and practical while not affecting behavior.

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A small portable accelerometer was developed to estimate the energy expenditure of daily activities. The accelerometer is reported to be an improvement over movement counters currently on the market. The oxygen requirement of 14 different activities was measured in 21 subjects while each wore the accelerometer on the waist.

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One thousand and fifty-eight men walked on a motor-driven treadmill at 3 miles/hour with the grade increasing 3% at 3-min intervals. (The 30 oldest men walked at 2 miles/hour.) Ventilation, Vo2, and Vco2 were recorded at each treadmill grade.

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Maximal oxygen uptake (Vo2max) was measured or estimated in 597 males, aged 16-69. Smoking and drinking habits were also determined in this population. After the influences of age, weight, skinfold thickness, and drinking habits were removed, smokers clearly had decreased Vo2max.

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Age 10-69, 793 males and 80 females were tested on the treadmill as they walked at 4.83 km per hour (3.27 km per hour in subjects 60 years and older).

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This well-designed study does not prove that athletic participation affects longevity and morbidity. Perhaps the same study of highly trained athletes would produce different results.

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A modification of the Harvard Step Test was administered to approximately 4700 males and females, age 10-69 in Tecumseh, Michigan. Heart rate response to this standardized exercise test is an estimate of capacity for muscular work. A blood sample was drawn 1 h after a glucose challenge on the same day the exercise test was given.

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