Relationship of Daily Step Counts to All-Cause Mortality and Cardiovascular Events.
暂无分享,去创建一个
T. Eijsvogels | L. Buffart | A. Mañas | E. Bakker | Niels Stens | Francisco B Ortega | Duck-chul Lee | Paul D Thompson | Dick H J Thijssen | Paul D. Thompson | Francisco B. Ortega | D. Thijssen
[1] W. Kraus,et al. Prospective Association of Daily Steps With Cardiovascular Disease: A Harmonized Meta-Analysis , 2022, Circulation.
[2] Meagan M. Wasfy,et al. Examining the Dose–Response Relationship between Physical Activity and Health Outcomes , 2022, NEJM Evidence.
[3] P. Katzmarzyk,et al. Vigorous physical activity, incident heart disease, and cancer: how little is enough? , 2022, European heart journal.
[4] Nathan P. Dawkins,et al. Physical Activity Volume, Intensity and Incident Cardiovascular Disease. , 2022, European heart journal.
[5] E. Stamatakis,et al. Prospective Associations of Daily Step Counts and Intensity With Cancer and Cardiovascular Disease Incidence and Mortality and All-Cause Mortality , 2022, JAMA internal medicine.
[6] C. Lavie,et al. Meta-analysis of Per-Day Step Count and All-Cause Mortality. , 2022, The American journal of cardiology.
[7] X. Sui,et al. Cardiorespiratory Fitness and Mortality Risk Across the Spectra of Age, Race, and Sex. , 2022, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[8] Yujia Liu,et al. Dose-response association between the daily step count and all-cause mortality: A systematic review and meta-analysis , 2022, Journal of sports sciences.
[9] J. Laukkanen,et al. Objectively Assessed Cardiorespiratory Fitness and All-Cause Mortality Risk: An Updated Meta-analysis of 37 Cohort Studies Involving 2,258,029 Participants. , 2022, Mayo Clinic proceedings.
[10] L. Ferrucci,et al. Daily steps and all-cause mortality: a meta-analysis of 15 international cohorts , 2022, The Lancet. Public health.
[11] P. Thompson,et al. Dose–response association between moderate to vigorous physical activity and incident morbidity and mortality for individuals with a different cardiovascular health status: A cohort study among 142,493 adults from the Netherlands , 2021, PLoS medicine.
[12] C. Lewis,et al. Steps per Day and All-Cause Mortality in Middle-aged Adults in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study , 2021, JAMA network open.
[13] Jianqian Chao,et al. The relationships between step count and all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events: A dose–response meta-analysis , 2021, Journal of sport and health science.
[14] A. Jayedi,et al. Daily Step Count and All-Cause Mortality: A Dose–Response Meta-analysis of Prospective Cohort Studies , 2021, Sports Medicine.
[15] U. Ekelund,et al. Association of accelerometer-derived step volume and intensity with hospitalizations and mortality in older adults: A prospective cohort study , 2021, Journal of sport and health science.
[16] Duck-chul Lee,et al. Associations of total and aerobic steps with the prevalence and incidence of frailty in older adults with hypertension. , 2021, Progress in cardiovascular diseases.
[17] Yafeng Wang,et al. Association of Physical Activity Intensity With Mortality: A National Cohort Study of 403 681 US Adults. , 2020, JAMA internal medicine.
[18] Scott W. Ducharme,et al. Walking cadence (steps/min) and intensity in 41 to 60-year-old adults: the CADENCE-adults study , 2020, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.
[19] Morten Wang Fagerland,et al. Step by step: Association of device‐measured daily steps with all‐cause mortality—A prospective cohort Study , 2020, Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports.
[20] C. Matthews,et al. Association of Daily Step Count and Step Intensity With Mortality Among US Adults. , 2020, JAMA.
[21] C. Vandelanotte,et al. Daily steps and diet, but not sleep, are related to mortality in older Australians. , 2019, Journal of science and medicine in sport.
[22] Gerta Rücker,et al. How to perform a meta-analysis with R: a practical tutorial , 2019, Evidence-Based Mental Health.
[23] J. Buring,et al. Association of Step Volume and Intensity With All-Cause Mortality in Older Women. , 2019, JAMA internal medicine.
[24] P. Whincup,et al. Does total volume of physical activity matter more than pattern for onset of CVD? A prospective cohort study of older British men , 2019, International journal of cardiology.
[25] John Staudenmayer,et al. Walking cadence (steps/min) and intensity in 21–40 year olds: CADENCE-adults , 2019, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.
[26] Sammi R. Chekroud,et al. Association between physical exercise and mental health in 1·2 million individuals in the USA between 2011 and 2015: a cross-sectional study. , 2018, The lancet. Psychiatry.
[27] Lindsay P. Toth,et al. Video-Recorded Validation of Wearable Step Counters under Free-living Conditions , 2018, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[28] S. Blair,et al. Daily step count and all-cause mortality in a sample of Japanese elderly people: a cohort study , 2018, BMC Public Health.
[29] P. Whincup,et al. Objectively measured physical activity, sedentary behaviour and all-cause mortality in older men: does volume of activity matter more than pattern of accumulation? , 2018, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[30] Mark A. Newman,et al. Association of Accelerometry‐Measured Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Events in Mobility‐Limited Older Adults: The LIFE (Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders) Study , 2017, Journal of the American Heart Association.
[31] Daniel D. Drevon,et al. Intercoder Reliability and Validity of WebPlotDigitizer in Extracting Graphed Data , 2017, Behavior modification.
[32] C. Ayers,et al. Continuous Dose-Response Association Between Sedentary Time and Risk for Cardiovascular Disease: A Meta-analysis. , 2016, JAMA cardiology.
[33] P. Thompson,et al. Exercise at the Extremes: The Amount of Exercise to Reduce Cardiovascular Events. , 2016, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[34] T. Dwyer,et al. Objectively Measured Daily Steps and Subsequent Long Term All-Cause Mortality: The Tasped Prospective Cohort Study , 2015, PloS one.
[35] K. Volpp,et al. Accuracy of smartphone applications and wearable devices for tracking physical activity data. , 2015, JAMA.
[36] Mark G. Davis,et al. Objectively assessed physical activity and lower limb function and prospective associations with mortality and newly diagnosed disease in UK older adults: an OPAL four-year follow-up study , 2014, Age and ageing.
[37] S. Blair,et al. Leisure-time running reduces all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk. , 2014, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[38] K. Kaufman,et al. Validity of using tri-axial accelerometers to measure human movement - Part II: Step counts at a wide range of gait velocities. , 2014, Medical engineering & physics.
[39] W. Kraus,et al. Association between change in daily ambulatory activity and cardiovascular events in people with impaired glucose tolerance (NAVIGATOR trial): a cohort analysis , 2014, The Lancet.
[40] F. Hu,et al. Long-Term Coffee Consumption and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Systematic Review and a Dose–Response Meta-Analysis of Prospective Cohort Studies , 2014, Circulation.
[41] Catrine Tudor-Locke,et al. Normative steps/day values for older adults: NHANES 2005-2006. , 2013, The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences.
[42] Janice J Eng,et al. Pedometer accuracy in slow walking older adults. , 2012, International journal of therapy and rehabilitation.
[43] David A. Rowe,et al. Using Cadence to Study Free-Living Ambulatory Behaviour , 2012, Sports Medicine.
[44] Matthias Egger,et al. Domains of physical activity and all-cause mortality: systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of cohort studies. , 2011, International journal of epidemiology.
[45] O. Raitakari,et al. Daily steps among Finnish adults: Variation by age, sex, and socioeconomic position , 2011, Scandinavian journal of public health.
[46] J. Spence,et al. How many steps/day are enough? for adults , 2011, The international journal of behavioral nutrition and physical activity.
[47] Ilse de Bourdeaudhuij,et al. How many steps/day are enough? For older adults and special populations , 2011, The international journal of behavioral nutrition and physical activity.
[48] François Mariotti,et al. Dose‐response analyses using restricted cubic spline functions in public health research , 2010, Statistics in medicine.
[49] John Staudenmayer,et al. Validity of the Omron HJ-112 pedometer during treadmill walking. , 2009, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[50] Shirley Bryan,et al. Validity of the Actical accelerometer step-count function. , 2007, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[51] Barbara E Ainsworth,et al. Comparison of pedometer and accelerometer measures of free-living physical activity. , 2002, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[52] I. Olkin,et al. Meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology - A proposal for reporting , 2000 .
[53] N. Laird,et al. Meta-analysis in clinical trials. , 1986, Controlled clinical trials.