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The utility of heart rate and minute ventilation as predictors of whole-body metabolic rate during occupational simulations involving load carriage.

Authors :
Notley SR
Peoples GE
Taylor NA
Source :
Ergonomics [Ergonomics] 2015; Vol. 58 (10), pp. 1671-81. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Apr 15.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The utility of cardiac and ventilatory predictors of metabolic rate derived under temperate and heated laboratory conditions was evaluated during three fire-fighting simulations (70-mm hose drag, Hazmat recovery, bushfire hose drag; N = 16 per simulation). The limits of agreement for cardiac (temperate: - 0.54 to 1.77; heated: - 1.39 to 0.80 l min(- 1)) and ventilatory surrogates (temperate: - 0.19 to 1.27; heated: - 0.26 to 1.16 l min(- 1)) revealed an over-estimation of oxygen consumption that exceeded the acceptable limits required by occupational physiologists (N = 25; ± 0.24 l min(- 1)). Although ventilatory predictions offered superior precision during low-intensity work (P < 0.05), a cardiac prediction was superior during more demanding work (P < 0.05). Deriving those equations under heated conditions failed to improve precision, with the exception of the cardiac surrogate during low-intensity work (P < 0.05). These observations imply that individualised prediction curves are necessary for valid estimations of metabolic demand in the field.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1366-5847
Volume :
58
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Ergonomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25746518
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00140139.2015.1026406