Treadmill Exercise Testing in an Epidemiologic Study of Elderly Subjects

Abstract
We sought to characterize the physical performance of older subjects in a community-based study of aging and fitness and to establish norms of oxygen consumption during exercise in this group. A community-based census identified 3057 age-eligible individuals of whom 2092 individuals (68.4%) agreed to participate in the overall study. Of these, 1101 subjects between 55 and 94 years of age who were free of known heart disease and able to perform treadmill exercise were tested using the Cornell protocol. Of these 1101 subjects, 73.8% of women and 89.5% of men (p < .001) exceeded what was considered a minimal threshold workload [i.e.,2/kg•min−2 decreased linearly with age for both women (y = 38.33 − 0.27•age +1.12H) and men (y = 41.78 − 0.26•age + 12.65H +0.15H•age), (p < .001 for sex difference), where H is defined as presence (=1) or absence (=0) of a disease condition. However, this sex-related difference disappeared when V̇O2/kg•min−2 was adjusted for lean body mass. Thus, from a community-based sample of older persons, we have provided data (by 5-year age groups) for rates of participation in treadmill exercise testing and the success rate for achieving maximal exercise. Oxygen consumption and other exercise data are presented for older, healthy subjects as well as for those with various chronic diseases associated with aging (excluding those with cardiac or cerebrovascular disease). Exercise duration, peak V̇O2/kg•min−2 (normalized for total and lean body mass), and peak exercise heart rate declined with age. Most of the sex difference in peak V̇O2/kg•min−2 could be explained by the greater percent of body fat in women.

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