Genre
- Journal Article
The aims of this study were: (1) to characterize selected fitness and health attributes of two types of habitual recreational off-road vehicle riders - off-road motorcyclists and all-terrain vehicle riders; (2) to explore differences among riders in terms of vehicle type, age, and gender; and (3) to compare the fitness and health of riders to population norms and clinical health standards. Canadian off-road riders (n = 141) of both sexes aged 16 years and over were recruited through local and national off-road riding organizations. Anthropometry, fitness, and health measures of off-road motorcycle and all-terrain vehicle riders were compared with population norms, health standards, and physical activity guidelines. Off-road motorcycle riders had above average aerobic fitness (79th percentile), while all-terrain vehicle riders were lower than average (40th percentile). All riders had a healthy blood lipid profile and a low incidence of the metabolic syndrome (12.9%) compared with members of the general population. Off-road motorcycle riders had healthier body composition and fitness than all-terrain vehicle riders; however, the body composition of off-road motorcycle riders was no healthier than that of the general population and all-terrain vehicle riders were worse than the general population. Off-road motorcycle riders had healthier anthropometry and fitness than all-terrain vehicle riders and thus fewer health risk factors for future disease, demonstrating that the physiological profiles of off-road riders are dependent on vehicle type.
Physical Activity and Chronic Disease Unit, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada. jamieb@yorku.ca
England
Informa Healthcare : London
Accession Number: 20845220. Language: English. Language Code: eng. Date Created: 20101108. Date Completed: 20110317. Update Code: 20111122. Publication Type: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't. Journal ID: 8405364. Publication Model: Print. Cited Medium: Internet. NLM ISO Abbr: J Sports Sci Linking ISSN: 02640414. Subset: IM. Date of Electronic Publication: 20101101; ID: 20845220
Language
- English
Subjects
- Adolescent
- Health
- Guidelines as Topic
- Canada/epidemiology
- Recreation*
- Motorcycles*
- Humans
- Exercise/physiology
- Reference Values
- Young Adult
- Off-Road Motor Vehicles*
- Lipids/*blood
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Middle Aged
- Male
- Physical Fitness*
- Metabolic Syndrome X/*epidemiology
- body composition
- Adult
- Female