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Characteristics and determinants of endurance cycle ergometry and six-minute walk distance in patients with COPD.

Authors :
Andrianopoulos V
Wagers SS
Groenen MT
Vanfleteren LE
Franssen FM
Smeenk FW
Vogiatzis I
Wouters EF
Spruit MA
Source :
BMC pulmonary medicine [BMC Pulm Med] 2014 May 31; Vol. 14, pp. 97. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 May 31.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: Exercise tolerance can be assessed by the cycle endurance test (CET) and six-minute walk test (6MWT) in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). We sought to investigate the characteristics of functional exercise performance and determinants of the CET and 6MWT in a large clinical cohort of COPD patients.<br />Methods: A dataset of 2053 COPD patients (43% female, age: 66.9 ± 9.5 years, FEV1% predicted: 48.2 ± 23.2) was analyzed retrospectively. Patients underwent, amongst others, respiratory function evaluation; medical tests and questionnaires, one maximal incremental cycle test where peak work rate was determined and two functional exercise tests: a CET at 75% of peak work rate and 6MWT. A stepwise multiple linear regression was used to assess determinants.<br />Results: On average, patients had impaired exercise tolerance (peak work rate: 56 ± 27% predicted, 6MWT: 69 ± 17% predicted). A total of 2002 patients had CET time of duration (CET-Tend) less than 20 min while only 51 (2.5%) of the patients achieved 20 min of CET-Tend . In former patients, the percent of predicted peak work rate achieved differed significantly between men (48 ± 21% predicted) and women (67 ± 31% predicted). In contrast, CET-Tend was longer in men (286 ± 174 s vs 250 ± 153 s, p < 0.001). Also, six minute walking distance (6MWD) was higher in men compared to women, both in absolute terms as in percent of predicted (443 m, 67%predicted vs 431 m, 72%predicted, p < 0.05). Gender was associated with the CET-Tend but BMI, FEV1 and FRC were related to the 6MWD highlighting the different determinants of exercise performance between CET and 6MWT.<br />Conclusions: CET-Tend is a valuable outcome of CET as it is related to multiple clinical aspects of disease severity in COPD. Gender difference should temper the interpretation of CET.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1471-2466
Volume :
14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC pulmonary medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24885117
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2466-14-97