| Literature DB >> 3620549 |
S B Roberts, P R Murgatroyd, J A Crisp, V Nohria, K H Schlingenseipen, A Lucas.
Abstract
An investigation was made of long-term variation in oxygen consumption rate (VO2) in preterm infants. Four subjects (gestational age 27-34 weeks, postnatal age 17-38 days, weight at study 1.1-2.6 kg) were studied for 5 days each using open-circuit, indirect calorimetry. The mean VO2 for each subject (11.0-11.5 litres/kg/day) was within the reported range. However, the between-subject coefficient of variation during the study (2.1%) was smaller than the mean between-measurement coefficient of variation for daily VO2 (3.8%, range 1.7-6.3%). In addition, the between-measurement coefficient of variation was increased further for measurement intervals of less than 24 h (reaching a mean of 8.3% for 1-hour periods), and a relationship between measurement duration and the precision of estimating VO2 over 3 or 5 days is described. Thus, even 24-hour measurements of VO2 in these preterm infants were less representative of the individual's VO2 over 3 days than the group mean estimate. This finding is of relevance to future studies in this area, particularly those in which short-term measurements of energy expenditure are combined with a nutrient balance study to determine the composition of weight gain, because even small errors in the estimate of total energy expenditure can lead to unacceptably large errors in calculated energy deposition.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1987 PMID: 3620549 DOI: 10.1159/000242677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Neonate ISSN: 0006-3126