1. Assessment of Cardiopulmonary Responses to Treadmill Walking Following Gastric Bypass Surgery
- Author
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James A. Arrowood, Robert L. Franco, Matthew G. Browning, Jeffrey E. Herrick, and Ronald K. Evans
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Gastric bypass ,Gastric Bypass ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Walking ,medicine.disease_cause ,Treadmill walking ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Oxygen Consumption ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Exercise ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Gastric bypass surgery ,business.industry ,Exercise therapy ,Middle Aged ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Exercise Therapy ,Obesity, Morbid ,Anesthesia ,Exercise Test ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,human activities ,Cycle ergometry - Abstract
Studies that have evaluated cardiopulmonary responses to exercise within the first few months of bariatric surgery have utilized cycle ergometry. However, walking is the most commonly reported mode of both pre- and post-operative PA. The divergent cardiopulmonary responses and metabolic costs of weight-bearing (walking) and non-weight-bearing (cycling) exercises warrant examination of the effects of bariatric surgery on cardiopulmonary responses during walking.Nine women completed a maximal cardiopulmonary exercise test on a treadmill 2 weeks before and 3 months after gastric bypass surgery (GBS). Heart rate (HR), oxygen uptake (VOTime to fatigue increased by ~140 s following GBS (p = 0.018). No other parameter improved during maximal exercise from pre- to post-surgery. Body weight- and fat-free mass-corrected VOWe have demonstrated that weight loss alone was not sufficient to improve select cardiopulmonary fitness measures during treadmill walking in obese females 3 months after GBS. However, we did observe a significant overall improvement in exercise capacity as the GBS group was able to exercise longer, presumably due to significant reductions in body mass and a subsequent reduced metabolic cost of walking.
- Published
- 2016
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