Relative Heart Rate, Heart Rate Reserve, and Vo2 During Submaximal Exercise in the Elderly
Open Access
- 1 July 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journals of Gerontology: Series A
- Vol. 51 (4) , M165-M171
- https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/51a.4.m165
Abstract
Background. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationships among relative maximal heart rate (%HRmax), maximal heart rate reserve (%HRmax reserve), and maximal oxygen uptake (%Vo2max) during submaximal exercise by elderly subjects. Methods. Vo2max and HRmax were determined on 36 women and 19 men, 60 to 80 yrs of age, by a maximal treadmill test to volitional exhaustion. On a separate day, subjects underwent a submaximal treadmill protocol consisting of three 6-min exercise stages at treadmill speeds and grades estimated to elicit 40%, 60%, and 80% of HRmax reserve. Cardiorespiratory responses were determined during mins 4–5 and 5–6 of each stage. Results. Measured exercise intensities expressed by the three methods were: %HRmax reserve = 36, 55, and 79%; %HRmax = 65, 75, and 88%; % Vo2max = 53, 69, and 88%. %HRmax was greater (p < .05) than % Vo2max at 53 and 69% of Vo2max. %HRmax reserve was less (p < .05) than % Vo2max for all three intensities. Slopes and intercepts for the linear regression equations relating % Vo2max with %HRmax and with %HRmax reserve differed between men and women (p < .05). The regression equation relating % Vo2max and %HRmax was y = −22.8 + 1.2 (%HRmax) −13.0 (Gender) + 0.2 (%HRmax × Gender): standard error of the estimate (SEE) = 9.7% and R2 = .71. The regression equation relating % Vo2max and %HRmax reserve was y = 32.4 + 0.7 (%HRmax reserve) −10.9 (Gender) + 0.2 (%HRmax reserve × Gender): SEE = 9.8% and R2 = .70 (Gender: F = 0; M = 1). Conclusions. The data indicate that there is considerable variability among methods of expressing exercise intensity and that %HRmax more closely represents % Vo2max than does %HRmax reserve (p < .05) in older adults. These results are in contrast to what has been shown with younger subjects and with American College of Sports Medicine guidelines for exercise prescription.Keywords
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