1. Influence of grade of obesity on the achievement of VO2max using an incremental treadmill test in youths.
- Author
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Toulouse L, Mucci P, Pezé T, and Zunquin G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Perception physiology, Physical Exertion physiology, Respiratory Mechanics, Exercise Test methods, Oxygen Consumption, Pediatric Obesity diagnosis, Pediatric Obesity physiopathology
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to analyze the influence of grade of obesity on the probability of achieving a VO2 plateau and threshold secondary criteria for verifying VO2max during a treadmill walk test in youths with obesity. Therefore, 72 youths with obesity (aged 8-16) performed an incremental treadmill walk test to exhaustion during which oxygen uptake (VO2), minute ventilation (VE), heart rate (HR) and rating of perceived exertion were continuously measured. HR corresponding to a "hard" level of perceived exertion was reported and expressed as a percentage of the predicted HRmax. The rate of achievement of criteria for validation VO2max (VO2 plateau; HR>95% theoretical HRmax; RER>1.0; rating of perceived exertion ≥ "hard") was compared between participants with grade I and grade II obesity. 37% of the participants achieved a VO2 plateau and 23% achieved both an HR>95% and RER >1.0. Youths with grade II obesity had lower minute ventilation (p<0.01) tended to be more likely to reach an HR>95% (OR = 0.33; P=0.06) and a "hard" rating of perceived exertion than grade I (OR = 4.5; P=0.07). However, there was no influence of grade of obesity on the achievement of VO2 plateau, and RER>1.0.
- Published
- 2021
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