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Predicting peak oxygen consumption during a conservative ramping protocol

ARENA R; HUMPHREY R; PEBERDY MA
J CARDPULM REHABIL , 2003, vol. 23, n° 3, p. 183-189
Doc n°: 109034
Localisation : Documentation IRR
Descripteurs : FA2 - EXPLORATION EXAMENS BILANS - COEUR

A significant discrepancy between measured oxygen consumption (VO(2)) (via ventilatory expired gas analysis) and estimated VO(2) (via the imposed workload) frequently is reported in the heart failure (HF) population during symptom-limited exercise testing. The purpose of this investigation was to examine the difference between measured and estimated VO(2) (VO(2) discrepancy) during a highly conservative ramping protocol.METHODSFor this study, 28 subjects with compensated HF (20 men and 8 women; age, 51.1 +/- 14.6 years) and 19 healthy control subjects (age-, gender-, and activity-matched to an HF subgroup) underwent symptom-limited exercise testing (treadmill) with ventilatory expired gas analysis.RESULTSPeak estimated and measured VO(2) values were significantly higher in the age-, gender-, and activity-matched control group than in the HF group, but the change in measured VO(2) per change in estimated VO(2) (Deltameasured/Deltaestimated VO(2) slope) and the VO(2) discrepancy did not reach statistical significance. Peak estimated VO(2) was a significant predictor of peak measured VO(2) in the overall HF group
(R2 = 0.90; P <.001).CONCLUSIONSAlthough estimated VO(2) is not considered a replacement for measured VO(2), these results indicate that a highly conservative exercise protocol may allow for a more accurate prediction of peak measured VO(2) via the estimated oxygen cost for a given workload in patients with compensated HF.

Langue : ANGLAIS

Tiré à part : OUI

Identifiant basis : 2003227132

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