Research article - (2011)10, 502 - 514
Daily Physical Activity and Physical Fitness in 11-to 15-year-old Trained and Untrained Turkish Boys
Alpay Güvenç1,, Caner Açikada2, Alper Aslan3, Kamil Özer4
1School of Physical Education and Sports, Akdeniz University, Antalya, Turkey
2School of Sport Sciences and Technology, Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey
3School of Physical Education and Sports, Mustafa Kemal University, Hatay, Turkey
4School of Physical Education and Sports, Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University, Çanakkale, Turkey

Alpay Güvenç
✉ Akdeniz University, School of Physical Education and Sports, Dumlupýnar Boulevard, Post Code: 07058 Campus, Antalya, Turkey
Email: alpayguvenc@hotmail.com
Received: 13-08-2010 -- Accepted: 20-06-2011
Published (online): 01-09-2011

ABSTRACT

The aims of this study were to assess levels and patterns of physical activity (PA) in relation to age and regular sport activity, and to examine its relationship to physical fitness in trained and untrained boys. One hundred forty-seven 11-to 15- year-old boys (73 trained and 74 untrained) participated in this study. Trained boys, comprised of 26 soccer, 25 handball and 22 volleyball players, had been training regularly for at least one year. The intensity, duration and frequency of PA were assessed from four complete days of heart rate monitoring with 15-seconds sampling intervals. Aerobic fitness was assessed by determining peakVO2 with a portable breath-by-breath gas analyzer (Cosmed K4b2) and the running speeds at fixed lactate concentrations during an incremental running test. Anaerobic fitness was evalu-ated with the Wingate Anaerobic Test. Skinfold thicknesses from eight sites and Tanner stages of pubic hair were also obtained. Based on 15-s heart rate data, instead of continuous activity, multiple short bouts of moderate and vigorous PA, lasting up to one minute, were characteristic of daily PA patterns of both trained and untrained boys. PA levels of trained boys were higher than untrained boys (p < 0.01) and the levels of PA decreased with age and maturation in both groups (p < 0.05). Daily PA variables were related to body fatness in both groups (p < 0.05), but the relationships were not consistent in the trained group. Daily PA variables were also related to aerobic fitness in the untrained group (p < 0.05) and these relationships were somewhat better with vigorous PA, whereas in the trained group, none of the PA variables were related to any of the aerobic fitness indices (p > 0.05). No relationship was observed between PA variables and anaerobic fitness in either group (p> 0.05). It seems that such relationships may somewhat depend on the fitness level of the subjects.

Key words: Physical activity, training, aerobic and anaerobic fitness, body fatness, children

Key Points
  • PA levels of trained boys were higher than untrained boys and the levels of PA decreased with age and maturation in both groups.
  • Based on the 15-s HR data, instead of continuous activity, multiple short bouts of moderate and vigorous PA, lasting up to one minute, were characteristic of daily PA patterns of both trained and untrained boys.
  • Daily PA variables were related to aerobic fitness in the untrained group and these relationships were somewhat better with vigorous PA (>70% HRR), whereas in the trained group, none of the PA variables were related to any of the aerobic fitness indices.
  • Neither peak nor mean power values were related to any of the daily PA variables in both trained and untrained groups.








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