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Reliability of gas exchange measurements from two different spiroergometry systems

TitleReliability of gas exchange measurements from two different spiroergometry systems
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2001
AuthorsMeyer T, Georg T, Becker C, Kindermann W
JournalInt J Sports Med
Volume22
Issue8
Pagination593-7
Date Published2001 Nov
ISSN0172-4622
KeywordsAdult, Analysis of Variance, Ergometry, Humans, Pulmonary Gas Exchange, Reproducibility of Results, Spirometry
Abstract

Reliability of two different spiroergometric systems was investigated by comparing gas exchange measurements from two consecutive identical bicycle ergometer ramp exercise tests which were conducted after an initial habituation trial. Twenty-three healthy subjects (age: 25+/-5 years; weight: 71+/-10 kg; peak oxygen uptake: 55+/-9 ml x min(-1) x kg(-1)) took part in the study. One apparatus was a portable mixing chamber system (MetaMax I, Cortex, Leipzig, Germany), the other one a stationary spiroergometric device measuring in the breath-by-breath mode (MetaLyzer 3B, Cortex). There were no relevant systematic changes in gas exchange measurements and heart rate from test 1 to test 2. Intra-class reliability coefficients were 0.984 (oxygen uptake = VO2), 0.977 (carbon dioxide output = VCO2), and 0.973 (minute ventilation = VE) for the MetaMax I, and 0.969 (VO2), 0.964 (VCO2), and 0.953 (VE) for the MetaLyzer 3B. Bland-Altman plots revealed a slightly smaller variability of MetaLyzer 3B measurements compared to those of MetaMax I. It is concluded that the spiroergometric devices MetaMax I and MetaLyzer 3B represent reliable instruments for exercise testing in sports medical routine and research. This is important to decide if longitudinal changes in gas exchange measurements represent clinically meaningful differences in performance or merely inconsistencies of the measuring tool.

DOI10.1055/s-2001-18523
Alternate JournalInt J Sports Med
PubMed ID11719895
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