Publication | Open Access
A comparison of methods of predicting maximum oxygen uptake.
202
Citations
22
References
1995
Year
Physical ActivityEngineeringGas Exchange ProcessEnvironmental ChemistryKinesiologyBody CompositionTreadmill TestExercisePhysical ExerciseTransport PhenomenaApplied PhysiologyHealth SciencesCooper TestCardiorespiratory FitnessRespiration (Physiology)Maximum Oxygen UptakeExercise SciencePhysiologyExercise PhysiologyCooper WalkPulmonary PhysiologyTissue OxygenationHuman Movement
The aim of this study was to compare the results from a Cooper walk run test, a multistage shuttle run test, and a submaximal cycle test with the direct measurement of maximum oxygen uptake on a treadmill. Three predictive tests of maximum oxygen uptake--linear extrapolation of heart rate of VO2 collected from a submaximal cycle ergometer test (predicted L/E), the Cooper 12 min walk, run test, and a multi-stage progressive shuttle run test (MST)--were performed by 22 young healthy males (mean(s.d.) age 22.1 (2.4) years; body mass 72.4(8.9kg)) and the values compared to those obtained by direct measurement on a maximal treadmill test. All of the subjects were regular exercisers. The mean(s.d.) from the various tests in ml.kg-1.min-1 were as follows: treadmill 60.1(8.0), Cooper 60.6(10.3), MST 55.6(8.0), and predictedL/E 52.0(8.4). The Cooper test had a correlation with the treadmill test of 0.92, while the MST and the predictedL/E had correlations of 0.86 and 0.76 respectively. Both the MST and predictedL/E showed systematic underprediction of the treadmill value. On average, the MST was 4.5 ml.kg-1.min-1 (s.e. 0.9) lower than the treadmill VO2max while the predictedL/E was 7.8 ml.kg-1. min-1 (s.e. 1.4) lower than the treadmill VO2max. These findings indicate that, for the population assessed, the Cooper walk run test is the best predictor of VO2max among the three tests.
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