Validity of the Supramaximal Test to Verify Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Children and Adolescents
Sansum, KM; Weston, ME; Bond, B; et al.Cockcroft, EJ; O'Connor, A; Tomlinson, OW; Williams, CA; Barker, AR
Date: 1 May 2019
Article
Journal
Pediatric exercise science
Publisher
Human Kinetics
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Purpose: This study had 2 objectives: (1) to examine whether the validity of the supramaximal verification test for maximal oxygen uptake ( formula presented ) differs in children and adolescents when stratified for sex, body mass, and cardiorespiratory fitness and (2) to assess sensitivity and specificity of primary and secondary ...
Purpose: This study had 2 objectives: (1) to examine whether the validity of the supramaximal verification test for maximal oxygen uptake ( formula presented ) differs in children and adolescents when stratified for sex, body mass, and cardiorespiratory fitness and (2) to assess sensitivity and specificity of primary and secondary objective criteria from the incremental test to verify formula presented . Methods: In total, 128 children and adolescents (76 male and 52 females; age: 9.3-17.4 y) performed a ramp-incremental test to exhaustion on a cycle ergometer followed by a supramaximal test to verify formula presented . Results: Supramaximal tests verified formula presented in 88% of participants. Group incremental test peak formula presented was greater than the supramaximal test (2.27 [0.65] L·min-1 and 2.17 [0.63] L·min-1; P < .001), although both were correlated (r = .94; P < .001). No differences were found in formula presented plateau attainment or supramaximal test verification between sex, body mass, or cardiorespiratory fitness groups (all Ps > .18). Supramaximal test time to exhaustion predicted supramaximal test formula presented verification (P = .04). Primary and secondary objective criteria had insufficient sensitivity (7.1%-24.1%) and specificity (50%-100%) to verify formula presented . Conclusion: The utility of supramaximal testing to verify formula presented is not affected by sex, body mass, or cardiorespiratory fitness status. Supramaximal testing should replace secondary objective criteria to verify formula presented .
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