Physical activity, heart rate variability–based stress and recovery, and subjective stress during a 9‐month study period

The aim of this study was to investigate the association between physical activity (PA) and objective heart rate variability (HRV)‐based stress and recovery with subjective stress in a longitudinal setting. Working‐age participants (n = 221; 185 women, 36 men) were overweight (body mass index, 25.3–...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports 2017-06, Vol.27 (6), p.612-621
Hauptverfasser: Föhr, T., Tolvanen, A., Myllymäki, T., Järvelä‐Reijonen, E., Peuhkuri, K., Rantala, S., Kolehmainen, M., Korpela, R., Lappalainen, R., Ermes, M., Puttonen, S., Rusko, H., Kujala, U.M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this study was to investigate the association between physical activity (PA) and objective heart rate variability (HRV)‐based stress and recovery with subjective stress in a longitudinal setting. Working‐age participants (n = 221; 185 women, 36 men) were overweight (body mass index, 25.3–40.1 kg/m2) and psychologically distressed (≥3/12 points on the General Health Questionnaire). Objective stress and recovery were based on HRV recordings over 1–3 work days. Subjective stress was assessed with the Perceived Stress Scale and PA level with a questionnaire. Data were collected at three time points: baseline, 10 weeks post intervention, and at the 36‐week follow‐up. We adopted a latent growth model to investigate the initial level and change in PA, objective stress and recovery, and subjective stress at the three measurement time points. The results showed that initial levels of PA (P 
ISSN:0905-7188
1600-0838
DOI:10.1111/sms.12683