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The variability of repeated measurements of oxygen debt in man following a maximal treadmill exercise
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1973
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Physical ActivityOxygen DebtEducationKinesiologyExerciseSport-related InjuriesPhysical ExerciseApplied PhysiologyClinical ExerciseSport PhysiologyPhysical MedicineHealth SciencesO2 DebtPhysical FitnessClinical Exercise PhysiologyCardiorespiratory FitnessRepeated MeasurementsHuman PhysiologyExercise ScienceExercise PhysiologyPhysiologyMean Maxv̇o2Maximal Treadmill ExerciseHuman MovementAthletic TrainingExercise Interventions
This study was designed to assess the contribution of the intraindividual variability of oxygen debt (O2 debt) to the range (β5–248 ml/kg) reported for human subjects following exercise which required maximal oxygen uptake (maxV̇O2). On 5–7 occasions 6 physical education students exercised at three progressive continuous workloads on a treadmill for 15–19 minutes and the O2 debt measured. Similarly 5 ice hockey forwards, 5 cross-country skiers, 5 track runners and 5 non-athletic control subjects were tested on one occasion. In every case the final exercise elicited a heart rate > 180 beats/min. and a plasma lactate > 70 mg/100 ml. The mean maxV̇O2 and O2 debts for the physical education students ranged from 51.9–68.0 ml/kg·min and 81.7–178.3 ml/kg respectively; the smallest O2 debt recorded was 43 ml/kg and the largest was 228.9 ml/kg. The intraindividual variability for O2 debt was greater than that for maxV̇O2 (p < 0.01), the mean individual coefficients of variation being 21.3 and 9.0% respectively. The cross-country skiers and track runners demonstrated greater maxV̇O2 values (p < 0.05) than the control group, but no significant difference could be shown between any of the groups for O2 debt. Thus training did not appear to be a major factor contributing to the wide diversity seen in O2 debts. The variability of the data clearly demonstrates that extreme caution must be exercised in the interpretation of a single measurement of O2 debt, especially when studies are carried out to examine either the mechanism or magnitude of this parameter.