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Revista Andaluza de Medicina del Deporte

versión On-line ISSN 2172-5063versión impresa ISSN 1888-7546

Rev Andal Med Deporte vol.8 no.1 Sevilla mar. 2015

https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ramd.2014.10.010 

COMUNICACIONES

 

SYMPOSIUM EXERNET. Investigación en Ejercicio y Salud: Presente y Futuro en España.
Granada, 7-8 de Noviembre de 2014

 

Effectiveness of an exercise intervention on fatigue and sleep quality in midlife women: the FLAMENCO project

 

 

D. Camiletti-Moiróna, M. Borges-Cosicb, V. Segura-Jiménezb, A. Andradea, P. Ruiz-Cabelloa, I.C. Álvarez-Gallardob, F. Estévez-Lópezb, A. Soriano-Maldonadob, M.P. de Amoc, T. Garcia-Revellesd, F.J. Galloe, A. Carbonell-Baezaf, M. Delgado-Fernándezb and V.A. Aparicioa

aDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Pharmacy, Faculty of Sport Sciences, and Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology, University of Granada, Spain
bDepartment of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Sport Sciences, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
cDepartment of Applied Economics. Faculty of Economics. University of Granada, Spain
dDepartment of Applied Economics. Faculty of Economics. University of Granada, Spain
eZaidín Sur healthcare centre, and Department of Medicine. Faculty of Medicine. University of Granada, Spain
fDepartment of Physical Education. Faculty of Education Science. University of Cádiz, Spain
Correo electrónico: dcamiletti@ugr.es (D. Camiletti-Moirón).

 

Key words: Menopause. Physical fitness. Latency. Sleep disorders. Health.

 

Objective. The purpose of the current study was to determine the effects of an exercise intervention on fatigue and sleep quality in perimenopausal women.
Methods. Fourteen Spanish (54 ± 3) perimenopausal women from a health centre of Granada were enrolled to participate in a 9 weeks (60 minutes/session, 3 sessions/week) moderate-intensity (i.e. 12-16 rating of perceived effort) exercise intervention. We assessed fatigue severity by means of a Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI) with 5 domains: general fatigue, physical fatigue, mental fatigue, reduced activity, and reduced motivation. Each domain consists of 4 items and has a potential score range from 4 to 20, where higher scores indicate a high degree of fatigue. The sleep quality was assessed trough the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire with 7 "component" scores: subjective sleep quality, sleep latency, sleep duration, habitual sleep efficiency, sleep disturbances, use of sleeping medication, and daytime dysfunction before and after the exercise intervention. Because fatigue and sleep quality variables were not normally distributed, nonparametric tests were used (Wilcoxon test for paired samples).
Results and discussion. We observed an 18% decrease in reduced motivation fatigue and a 12% in the use of sleeping medications after 9 weeks of exercise intervention (both, P < 0.05). No differences were found in the remaining variables. Despite the results displayed, an improved tendency in all the MFI and the PSQI domains after 9 weeks of exercise program was observed. However, due to the small sample size and the length of the exercise program we cannot confirm this approach significantly.
Conclusion. Overall, a moderate-intensity exercise intervention for 9 weeks (3 sessions/week) might improve motivation-related fatigue and reduce the pharmaceutics cost average per habitant in Spanish perimenopausal women. The small simple size and the duration of the exercise intervention might have influenced the present results. Therefore, future studies with larger sample size are needed in order to corroborate our hypothesis.

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