| Literature DB >> 21197479 |
Peter Hofmann1, Gerhard Tschakert.
Abstract
There is clear evidence regarding the health benefits of physical activity. These benefits follow a dose-response relationship with a particular respect to exercise intensity. Guidelines for exercise testing and prescription have been established to provide optimal standards for exercise training. A wide range of intensities is used to prescribe exercise, but this approach is limited. Usually percentages of maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2)) or heart rate (HR) are applied to set exercise training intensity but this approach yields substantially variable metabolic and cardiocirculatory responses. Heterogeneous acute responses and training effects are explained by the nonuniform heart rate performance curve during incremental exercise which significantly alters the calculations of %HR(max) and %HRR target HR data. Similar limitations hold true for using %VO(2max) and %VO(2)R. The solution of these shortcomings is to strictly apply objective submaximal markers such as thresholds or turn points and to tailor exercise training within defined regions.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21197479 PMCID: PMC3010619 DOI: 10.4061/2011/209302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiol Res Pract ISSN: 2090-0597 Impact factor: 1.866
Overview of recommendations for physical activity and public health in healthy adults and patients.
| Recommendation | Intensity | Duration | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACSM [ | moderate intensity 40%–59% HRR (VO2R) vigorous intensity ≥ 60% HRR (VO2R) | 20–60 min·day−1 continuous or intermittent in bouts of at least 10 min 20–60 min·day−1 continuous or intermittent in bouts of at least 10 min | min. of 5 d·wk−1min. 3 d·wk−1 |
| CAD + MI patients | 40%–85% HRR (VO2R) | ||
| HF patients | 40%–70% HRR (VO2R) | ||
| ACSM [ | 40%–85% HRR (VO2R) | 20–60 min·day−1 | 3–5 d·wk−1 |
| ACSM/AHA [ | moderate intensity (between 3.0 and 6.0 METs) vigorous intensity (above 6.0 METs) | at least 30 min·day−1 continuous or intermittent in bouts of at least 10 min each at least 20 min·day−1 continuous activity | min. of 5 d·wk−1min. of 3 d·wk−1 |
| ACSM/AHA [ | moderate intensity (5-6 on a 10-point scale)vigorous intensity (7-8 on a 10-point scale) | at least 30 min·day−1 continuous or intermittent (in bouts of at least 10 min each) activity at least 20 min·day−1 continuous activity | min. of 5 d·wk−1min. of 3 d·wk−1 |
| AHA [ | moderate intensity (40%–60% of HRR) vigorous intensity as tolerated (60%–85 % of HRR) | at least 30 min·day−1 | min. of 3 d·wk−1 |
| ACSM [ | moderate intensity (40%–60% of VO2R) vigorous intensity acceptable for selected adults | 30–60 min·day−1 continuous or intermittent (in bouts of at least 10 min each) activity | most, preferably all days per week |
| AHA [ | 50%–80% of HRmax | 20–60 min/session (or multiple 10 min sessions) | 3–7 d·wk−1 |
| American Diabetes Association [ | moderate intensity (50%–70% of HRmax) vigorous intensity (>70% of HRmax) | at least 150 min·wk−1 moderate and/or at least 90 min·wk−1 vigorous activity | min. of 3 d·wk−1, no more than 2 consecutive days without activity |
HRR: heart rate reserve; VO2R: oxygen consumption reserve.
CAD: coronary artery disease; MI: myocardial infarction; HF: heart failure.
Figure 2Accuracy of target training heart rate dependent on the time course of the Heart Rate Performance Curve. The same relative intensity of 85% HRmax (usual upper limit) gives different work load related to the anaerobic threshold (LTP2) [29]. Subject (A) 85% HRmax is well below HR LTP2; subject (B) 85% HRmax is already above HR LTP2.
Figure 3Error of estimate for percent heart rate reserve (HRR) compared to %HR at the second lactate turn point (LTP2) as well as the error of estimate for percent HRmax related to the deflection of the heart rate performance curve (kHR) [29, 30] in healthy young male and female sports students, young obese subjects, older healthy subjects, and patients after myocardial infarction [31].
Figure 4Mean blood lactate concentration (La) during constant load exercise in trained subjects applying controlled 70%–75% of VO2max (unpublished results).
Figure 1Schematic representation of first- and second- turn points of selected variables (La blood lactate concentration; VE: ventilation; VE/VO2: equivalent for oxygen uptake; VE/VCO2: equivalent for carbon dioxide output; HR: heart rate; B: breathing frequency) and distinct phases (Ph 1–3) of energy supply determined from young healthy male subjects. Ph 1: no increase of blood lactate concentration above baseline during constant load exercise. Ph 2: increased but steady state blood lactate concentration during constant load exercise. Ph 3: continuous increase of blood lactate concentration during constant load exercise leading to early termination of exercise.