Estimation of Metabolic Energy Expenditure during Short Walking Bouts

Abstract Assessment of metabolic energy expenditure from indirect calorimetry is currently limited to sustained (>4 min) cyclic activities, because of steady-state requirements. This is problematic for patient populations who are unable to perform such sustained activities. Therefore, this study...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of sports medicine 2021-11, Vol.42 (12), p.1098-1104
Hauptverfasser: Blokland, Ilse Johanna, de Koning, Jos J., van Kan, Thomas, van Bennekom, Coen A. M., van Dieen, Jaap H., Houdijk, Han
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Assessment of metabolic energy expenditure from indirect calorimetry is currently limited to sustained (>4 min) cyclic activities, because of steady-state requirements. This is problematic for patient populations who are unable to perform such sustained activities. Therefore, this study explores validity and reliability of a method estimating metabolic energy expenditure based on oxygen consumption (V̇O 2 ) during short walking bouts. Twelve able-bodied adults twice performed six treadmill walking trials (1, 2 and 6 min at 4 and 5 km/h), while V̇O 2 was measured. Total V̇O 2 was calculated by integrating net V̇O 2 over walking and recovery. Concurrent validity with steady-state V̇O 2 was assessed with Pearson’s correlations. Test-retest reliability was assessed using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) and Bland-Altman analyses. Total V̇O 2 was strongly correlated with steady-state V̇O 2 (r=0.91–0.99), but consistently higher. Test-retest reliability of total V̇O 2 (ICC=0.65–0.92) was lower than or comparable to steady-state V̇O 2 (ICC=0.83–0.92), with lower reliability for shorter trials. Total V̇O 2 discriminated between gait speeds. Total oxygen uptake provides a useful measure to estimate metabolic load of short activities from oxygen consumption. Although estimates are less reliable than steady-state measurements, they can provide insight in the yet unknown metabolic demands of daily activities for patient populations unable to perform sustained activities.
ISSN:0172-4622
1439-3964
DOI:10.1055/a-1373-5770