Utility of Verification Testing to Confirm Attainment of Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Unhealthy Participants: A Perspective Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Outcomes Identified
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Summary of Studies
3.2. Methods Used to Assess VO2max during Incremental and Verification Testing
3.3. Differences in VO2max between Ramp and Verification Testing
3.4. Differences in HRmax between Ramp and Verification Testing
3.5. Exercise Duration of Verification Testing
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Participants | Age (Years) | BMI (kg/m2) | Physical Activity Classification |
---|---|---|---|---|
Leicht et al. [24] | 24 M wheelchair athletes | 28 ± 6 | NR | Active |
Frederike de Groot et al. [25] | 20 children with spina bifida | 10 ± 5 | 19 ± 4 | NR |
Mahoney et al. [26] | 9 M with obesity | 24 + 6 | 33 + 4 | Recreationally active |
Arad et al. [27] | 35 Sedentary M/W | 29 ± 4 | NR | Inactive |
Causer et al. [28] | 28 M/W with cystic fibrosis | 31 ± 12 | 22 ± 3 | NR |
Astorino et al. [9] | 24 Sedentary M/W | 22 ± 4 | 25 ± 2 | Inactive |
Astorino et al. [23] | 10 M/W SCI 10 M/W AB | 33 ± 10 SCI 24 ± 7 AB | 23 ± 3 SCI 24 ± 3 AB | Recreationally active |
Astorino et al. [13] | 17 W with obesity | 37 ± 10 | 39 ± 4 | Inactive |
Bhammar et al. [29] | 11 M/W with hypertension | 22 ± 2 | 24 ± 3 | NR |
Werkman et al. [30] | 16 adolescents with cystic fibrosis | 14 ± 2 | 18 ± 1 | NR |
Misquita et al. [31] | 108 W who are Postmenopausal | 60 ± 6 | 33 ± 4 | Inactive |
Bhammar et al. [32] | 9 NO children 9 OB children | 11 ± 1 | 18 ± 1 NO 29 ± 4 OB | NR |
Bowen et al. [15] | 24 M with symptomatic CHF | 64 ± 11 | 30 ± 3 | NR |
Dalleck et al. [10] | 18 Older M/W | 59 ± 6 | 28 ± 3 | Recreationally active |
Moreno-Cabañas et al. [14] | 100 M/W with metabolic syndrome | 57 ± 8 | 32 ± 5 | Inactive |
Sawyer et al. [12] | 19 M/W with obesity | 35 ± 8 | 36 ± 5 | Inactive |
Saynor et al. [33] | 13 adolescents with cystic fibrosis | 13 ± 3 | 21 ± 4 | NR |
Schaun et al. [22] | 33 adults with hypertension | 67 ± 5 | 32 ± 6 | NR |
Schneider et al. [21] | 43 W with breast cancer; 32 M with prostate cancer | 61 ± 12 | 26 ± 4 | Recreationally active |
Wood et al. [11] | 135 M/W with Overweight or Obesity | 37 ± 5 | 30 ± 2 | Inactive |
Study | Exercise Mode | Traditional VO2max Criteria Adopted | VO2max Protocol | Recovery Phase Protocol | VER Protocol | VER vs. GXT Criteria |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arad et al. [24] | CE | VO2 plateau; RER ≥ 1.10; ≥95% HRmax | RAMP 4 min unloaded cycling + 1 W/3 s for women 1 W/4 s for men | 10 min active recovery at 25 W + 2–3 min passive | 100% PPO | NR |
Astorino et al. [9] | CE | NR | STEP 14 W/min for women 21 W/min for men and 5 W/20 s for women and 10 W/20 s for men | 1–1.5 h or 24 h later | 2-min WU at 28 W for women, 42 W for men followed by cycling at 105 or 115% PPO | NR |
Astorino et al. [23] | ACE | VO2 plateau using individual ΔVO2 values for each participant | RAMP 5 min warm-up + 3 W/min for TETRA, 13 W/min for PARA, and 8–20 W/min for AB | 10 min active recovery at 7 W | 2 min at 7 W + arm cycling 105% PPO | NR |
Astorino et al. [13] | CE | NR | RAMP 40 W for 2 min + 20 W/min | 10 min active recovery at 20 W | 2 min WU at 20 W + cycling at 105% PPO | A conservative difference in VO2max between protocols <0.06 L/min was used to identify ‘true’ VO2max |
Bhammar et al. [32] | CE | RER ≥ 1.00, HR ≥ 90% of age-predicted HRmax | STEP 6 min at 40 W + initial WR of 20 W followed by 10–15 W/min | 15 min of passive recovery | 2 min WU at 20 W + cycling at 105% PPO | Measured VER VO2max was considered higher than measured GXT VO2max when difference between measured VER and GXT VO2max was greater than the difference between predicted values |
Bhammar et al. [29] | CE | HR > 85% age-predicted HRmax; RER > 1.15 | STEP 40 W + 20 W/min for women 50 W + 25 W/min for men | 15 min passive recovery | 2 min WU at 30 W for women, 40 W for men + cycling at 105% PPO | VER-derived VO2max was higher than incremental VO2max when the difference between measured VER VO2max and incremental VO2max was greater than the difference between predicted VER and incremental VO2max |
Bowen et al. [15] | CE | BLa > 8 mM; HR within 10% of age-predicted HRmax; RPE > 18; RER > 1.00–1.15 | RAMP 4 min at 10 W + 4–18 W/min | 5 min active recovery at 10 W | 4 min WU at 10 W + cycling at 95% PPO | NR |
Causer et al. [28] | CE | VO2 plateau; RPE > 9; RER > 1.03–1.05; Predicted VO2peak, PPO, or HRpeak | RAMP 3 min at 20 W + 10–25 W/min | 5 min cool-down at 20 W +10 min seated rest | 3 min WU at 20 W + cycling at 110% PPO | Less than 9% difference between protocols |
Dalleck et al. [10] | CE | RER > 1.0–1.15; HR within 10 b/min of age-predicted HRmax; VO2 plateau | STEP2 min WU at 50 W + 10–15 W/min | 60 min passive recovery | 2 min WU at 50 W + cycling at 105% PPO | Less than 3% difference in VO2max between tests |
de Groot et al. [25] | TM | Heart rate = 95% (210–age); RER > 1.0; VO2 plateau | STEP 2% grade + 2 km/h + 0.25% change in grade/min or 3 km/h + 0.50% change in grade per min | 4 min passive recovery | 110% peak speed | Difference in VO2max between protocols >2.1 mL/kg/min |
Leicht et al. [24] | TM | VO2 plateau; RER > 1.05 BLa > 4.0 mM; HR > 85% age-predicted HRmax | STEP Constant speed at 1% grade and grade increased by 0.1–0.3%/min | 5 min active recovery at 1 m/s at 1% grade | Same peak speed as GXT but supramaximal gradient (+0.6% for PARA and NON-SCI; +0.3% for TETRA) | NR |
Mahoney et al. [26] | CE | NR | RAMP 5 min WU at 20 W before power continuously increased that was individualized for each participant | At least 2 days later | 2 min rest + 5 min WU at 50 W + cycling at 80–105% PPO | NR |
Misquita et al. [31] | TM | HRmax > 220–age; RER > 1.1; VO2 plateau | STEP Bruce protocol | 1–2 min of slow walking +2 min at 0% incline at a speed eliciting 70%HRmax | Balke protocol TM grade was increased to 4% for 2 min and increased 2%/min | NR |
Moreno-Cabañas et al. [14] | CE | VO2 plateau; RER > 1.1; BLa 8 mM; HR < 5% from age-predicted HRmax | RAMP 3-min WU at 30 W for women, 50 W for men + 15–20 W/min | 5 min active recovery at 30 W + 15 min seated recovery | 2 min WU at 30 W for women, 50 W for men + cycling at 110% PPO | NR |
Sawyer et al. [12] | CE | NR | RAMP 5 min WU 50 W + 30 W/min for men 25 W + 15 W/min for women | Active recovery for 5–10 min at 25 or 50 W | 100% PPO | NR |
Saynor et al. [33] | CE | NR | RAMP 3 min at 20 W + 10–25 W/min | 5 min active recovery at 20 W + 10 min passive seated recovery | 3 min at 20 W + cycling at 110% PPO | NR |
Schaun et al. [22] | TM | ΔVO2 ≤ 150 mL/min; RER > 1.10; RPE ≥ 18; ± 10 b/min of 220–age | STEP 3 min at 3 km/h + 0.5 km/h and 1% increments in speed and grade | 10 min of passive recovery | 2 min at 50% of peak speed/grade + 1 min at 70% peak speed/grade + exercise at 1 stage higher than GXT | Difference in VO2max between protocols < 3% |
Schneider et al. [21] | CE | RER ≥ 1.1; HRmax ≥ 200 b/min–age BLamax ≥ 8 mM; RPE ≥ 18 | STEP 20 W + 10 W/min | 10 min passive recovery | cycling at 110% PPO | VO2max in VER does not exceed GXT-derived value by >3% |
Werkman et al. [30] | CE | VO2 plateau; HR > 95% age-predicted HRmax; RER > 1.0 | RAMP Unloaded cycling + 10 W/min < 120 cm; 15 W/min 120–150 cm; 20 W/min > 150 cm | 1 min passive recovery + 1 min unloaded cycling | Test started with an increase in PO every 10 s based on each participant’s height | NR |
Wood et al. [11] | TM | VO2 plateau; HR ± 11 b/min of age-predicted HRmax RER ≥ 1.15; BLa ≥ 8 mM; RPE ≥ 18 | STEP 4 min at 5.6 km/h −1 and 0% grade + increased velocity to a speed consistent with face-paced walk slow jog + 2.5% change in grade/min | 5–10 min passive recovery | 0.5 km/h above maximum workload in GXT achieved through increases in speed and/or grade | Change in VO2 < 50% of that expected for the change in mechanical work |
Study | VO2max GXT (mL·kg·min−1) | GXT Duration (min) | VO2max VER (mL·kg−1·min−1) | VER Duration (min) | HRmax GXT (b/min) | HRmax VER (b/min) | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arad et al. [27] | 28 ± 6 | 9.6 ± 1.6 | 30 ± 7 * | 2.6 ± 0.5 | 170 ± 12 | 172 ± 9 | VER elicited a higher VO2peak versus GXT, although there was no difference in HRpeak. |
Astorino et al. [9] | 32 ± 4 | 10.5 ± 1.6 | 32 ± 5 | 2.7 ± 0.7 | 191 ± 9 * | 187 ± 10 | There was no difference in VO2max between protocols, yet several participants demonstrated a higher VO2max in response to VER. GXT revealed a higher HRmax versus VER. |
Astorino et al. [23] | 17 ± 4 SCI 24 ± 4 AB | 7.4 ± 1.4 | 17 ± 4 SCI 26 ± 4 * AB | 1.7 ± 0.3 | 161 ± 29 176 ± 17 | 160 ± 26 178 ± 12 | Mean VO2peak from VER was higher than GXT in the AB group, although VO2peak was similar across protocols in SCI. There was no difference in HRpeak across all groups between protocols. |
Astorino et al. [13] | 2.0 ± 0.4 L/min | NR | 2.0 ± 0.3 L/min | 1.5 ± 0.3 | 174 ± 13 | 174 ± 12 | There was no difference in VO2max or HRmax between protocols, although 5, 9, and 7 women revealed a verification VO2max > 0.06 L/min higher versus GXT. |
Bhammar et al. [32] | 40 ± 4 NO 27 ± 4 OB | 9.7 ± 2.4 | 43 ± 4 * NO 28 ± 3 OB | 2.2 ± 0.5 | 189 ± 6 NO 190 ± 13 OB | 184 ± 8 NO 188 ± 12 OB | All children exhibited higher mean VER VO2max versus GXT, although there was no difference in HRmax. |
Bhammar et al. [29] | 31 ± 6 | NR | 32 ± 6 | 2.1 ± 0.3 | 180 ± 11 | 180 ± 7 | There was no difference in VO2max or HRmax between protocols, yet 3 of 11 participants exhibited a higher VO2max during VER compared to GXT. |
Bowen et al. [15] | 14 ± 3 | 5.8–15.1 ± 0.5–1.9 | 15 ± 3 | 2.0 ± 0.4 | 117 ± 20 | 119 ± 26 | Mean VO2peak and HRpeak were not different between protocols and VO2peak was confirmed in 60% of participants. |
Causer et al. [28] | 35 ± 8 | 9.3 ± 2.3 | 33 ± 7 | 1.5 ± 0.4 | 168 ± 15 | NR | Mean VO2peak did not differ between protocols, yet VER VO2peak was higher than GXT in 21% of participants. |
Dalleck et al. [10] | 28 ± 6 | 10.1 ± 2.1 | 27 ± 6 | 2.5 ± 0.5 | 165 ± 11 | 164 ± 10 | Mean VO2max and HRmax were not different between protocols, although 11% of subjects exhibited higher VO2max and HRmax values with VER. |
Frederike de Groot et al. [25] | 34 ± 8 | 9.0 ± 4.0 | 35 ± 8 | NR | 184 ±20 | NR | Mean VO2peak was similar between protocols, yet 25% and 42% of participants showed a higher VO2peak and HRpeak in VER versus GXT. |
Leicht et al. [24] | 23–40 ± 3–6 | 8.5–10.5 ± 0.5–2.5 | NR | NR | 125–188 ± 7–10 | 125–181 ± 7–15 | VO2peak and HRpeak did not differ between VER and GXT in all subgroups. Athletes tended to exhibit a lower VO2peak in response to VER versus GXT. |
Mahoney et al. [26] | 3.4 ± 0.4 L/min | 8.3 ± 0.4 | 3.4–3.6 ± 0.5 L·min−1 | 2.5–6.9 ± 0.4–2.5 | 175 ± 12 | 170–177 ± 13–17 | VER performed at 90% PPO elicits greater VO2max versus GXT, yet there was no difference in HRmax. |
Misquita et al. [31] | 19 ± 3 | 8.8 ± 1.9 | 20 ± 3 * | 8.5 ± 1.9 | 156 ± 15 | 158 ± 14 | VER revealed higher VO2peak versus GXT, although HRpeak was similar. |
Moreno-Cabañas et al. [14] | 23 ± 8 | 7.9 ± 2.0 | 25 ± 8 * | 2.1 ± 0.4 | 155 ± 15 | 156 ± 15 | VER-derived VO2peak was higher than GXT, although there was no difference in HRpeak. Forty percent of participants show underestimated VO2peak in response to GXT that is confirmed with VER. |
Sawyer et al. [12] | 2 ± 1 L·min−1 | 7.1 ± 1.9 | 2 ± 1 L·min−1 | 1.9 ± 0.4 | 174 ± 16 | 177 ± 13 * | Mean VO2max was not different between protocols, yet HRmax was higher in VER. Thirteen and 8 participants achieved a VO2max and HRmax in response to VER that was ≥2% and 4–14 b/min higher than GXT. |
Saynor et al. [33] | 34 ± 3 | 8–12 | NR | NR | 187 ± 15 | NR | VO2max values are reproducible in this sample in response to GXT and VER. |
Schaun et al. [22] | 22 ± 5 | 12 ± 2 | 24 ± 6 * | 4.7 ± 0.4 | 150 ± 16 | 152 ± 16 | VO2max was higher in response to VER versus GXT, although there was no difference in HRmax. |
Schneider et al. [21] | 21 ± 4 | 13.0 ± 2.9 | 21 ± 5 * | 2.2 ± 0.3 | 150 ± 20 | 151 ± 21 | VO2max from VER was lower than GXT, although there was no difference in HRmax. Sixty-eight percent of participants showed a ‘true’ VO2max with VER, although 32% elicited a 3–21% higher VO2max. |
Werkman et al. [30] | 39 ± 7 | 11.0 ± 3.0 | 39 ± 9 | 4.0 ± 1.0 | 177 ± 12 | 179 ± 13 | There was no difference in VO2peak or HRpeak between protocols. |
Wood et al. [11] | 34 ± 7 | 8–12 | 34 ± 7 | NR | 180 ± 10 | 180 ± 10 | Neither VO2peak nor HRpeak were different between protocols. |
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Astorino, T.A.; Emma, D. Utility of Verification Testing to Confirm Attainment of Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Unhealthy Participants: A Perspective Review. Sports 2021, 9, 108. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports9080108
Astorino TA, Emma D. Utility of Verification Testing to Confirm Attainment of Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Unhealthy Participants: A Perspective Review. Sports. 2021; 9(8):108. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports9080108
Chicago/Turabian StyleAstorino, Todd A., and Danielle Emma. 2021. "Utility of Verification Testing to Confirm Attainment of Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Unhealthy Participants: A Perspective Review" Sports 9, no. 8: 108. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports9080108
APA StyleAstorino, T. A., & Emma, D. (2021). Utility of Verification Testing to Confirm Attainment of Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Unhealthy Participants: A Perspective Review. Sports, 9(8), 108. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports9080108