Background Self-reported physical activity (PA) is well
associated with cardiorespiratory fitness and exercise capacity. The short
International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ-short) is a frequently
used instrument for cross-national assessments of PA in adults. The purpose
of this study was to validate IPAQ-short against exercise capacity in Greek
young adults.
Design and methods One hundred and thirteen men and 105
women, aged 20-29 years, were randomly selected from a larger population of
young health-science students. A Greek version of IPAQ-short (IPAQ-Gr) was
administered to all participants before their exercise capacity evaluation
with a maximal Bruce treadmill test. Multiple regression and correlation
analyses were used to examine the associations between all IPAQ-Gr outcomes
with exercise capacity based on maximal treadmill time.
Results Spearman's correlations for total and
vigorous PA against maximal treadmill time were significant in all groups
examined, ranging from 0.35 to 0.43. Moderate and walking PA correlations
were poor and nonsignificant, ranging from near-zero values to 0.19. In
multiple linear regression analysis, only sex, smoking, and vigorous PA from
all personal and log-transformed IPAQ-Gr data were significantly associated
with maximal treadmill time. Partial correlation analysis for the overall
population, adjusted for sex and smoking, showed that total PA
(r = 0.37) and vigorous PA (r
= 0.47) were significantly associated with exercise
capacity.
Conclusion IPAQ-Gr was tested against exercise capacity
and showed acceptable validity properties in Greek young adults. Total and
vigorous weekly PA expenditure were well associated with exercise capacity,
presenting significant validity correlations against maximal treadmill
time.