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PHYS THER
Vol. 88, No. 6, June 2008, pp. 747-756
DOI: 10.2522/ptj.20070161

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Research Reports

Validity of Values for Metabolic Equivalents of Task During Submaximal All-Extremity Exercise and Reliability of Exercise Responses in Frail Older Adults

Marissa E Mendelsohn, Denise M Connelly, Tom J Overend and Robert J Petrella

ME Mendelsohn, MSc, PhD, is a postdoctoral fellow at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
DM Connelly, BScPT, PhD, is Assistant Professor, School of Physical Therapy, The University of Western Ontario, Room 1588, Elborn College, 1201 Western Rd, London, Ontario, Canada N6G 1H1, and Associate Scientist, Lawson Health Research Institute, St Joseph's Health Care London, London, Ontario, Canada
TJ Overend, BScPT, PhD, is Associate Professor, School of Physical Therapy, The University of Western Ontario, and Associate Scientist, Lawson Health Research Institute, St Joseph's Health Care London
RJ Petrella, MD, PhD, is Professor, Departments of Family Medicine, Medicine (Division of Cardiology), Physical Medicine, and Rehabilitation, Schulich School of Medicine, and School of Kinesiology, The University of Western Ontario, and Beryl and Richard Ivey Research Chair, Aging, Rehabilitation, and Geriatric Care, Lawson Health Research Institute, St Joseph's Health Care London

Address all correspondence to Dr Connelly at: dconnell{at}uwo.ca

Background and Purpose: Physical therapists and rehabilitation professionals in hospital and long-term care centers are using all-extremity semirecumbent exercise machines in their treatment programs. This study was undertaken to investigate the concurrent validity of values for software-generated metabolic equivalents of task (MET) from an all-extremity semirecumbent exercise machine and directly measured values for MET from a portable metabolic unit across a range of submaximal exercise intensities. A second purpose of this study was to determine the test-retest reliability of oxygen consumption and heart rate responses in older adults between standardized sessions of submaximal all-extremity aerobic exercise.

Subjects and Methods: The study participants were 18 older adults (mean age=82 years, SD=5; 3 women, 15 men) who were living in long-term care centers and who completed 2 test sessions of a standardized exercise protocol 1 week apart. The exercise protocol included a warm-up period, three 4-minute stages of exercise at incremental workload levels, and a cool-down period. The breath-by-breath metabolic data from the portable metabolic unit, heart rate, MET values from the exercise machine, Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion, and watts were recorded continuously throughout the exercise protocol.

Results: The concurrent validity of the MET values from the exercise machine and the portable metabolic unit ranged from very good to excellent on both day 1 and day 2 (r=.85–.97). The test-retest reliability of subjects' heart rate responses and MET values from the portable metabolic unit was moderate to high across submaximal exercise intensities (intraclass correlation coefficients [2,1]=.85–.91).

Discussion and Conclusion: The exercise machine software-generated MET values were representative of directly measured oxygen consumption values across a range of submaximal intensities during all-extremity semirecumbent exercise in older adults with multisystem impairments.




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S. A Billinger, B. Y Tseng, and P. M Kluding
Modified Total-Body Recumbent Stepper Exercise Test for Assessing Peak Oxygen Consumption in People With Chronic Stroke
Physical Therapy, October 1, 2008; 88(10): 1188 - 1195.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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