Six-minute walking test done in a hallway or on a treadmill: How close do the two methods agree?

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Abstract

The 6-min walking test (6-MWT) is probably the most widely used test to measure the functional capacity in cardiac rehabilitation. Although the American Thoracic Society recommends testing on a flat surface, treadmills are also used for testing. Therefore, we want to investigate the interchangeability of results of treadmill and hallway 6-MWT in a population of patients participating in a cardiac rehabilitation programme. Preexperimental design. University hospital Department of Cardiology and Physiotherapy. Patients entering the cardiac rehabilitation programme of the Maastricht University Cardiology Department. Agreement in 6-min walking distance between the hallway and treadmill test results were calculated by taking the mean difference between the two methods and the 95% confidence interval of the difference and plotting this against the average of the two test results. A Bland and Altman plot was constructed, showing the mean difference and the 95% limits of agreement between the two methods. Sixty-nine patients participated in this study. Mean difference between walking on a treadmill and walking in a hallway was 9 m in favour of the hallway test. The 95% limits of agreement were ± 118 m. Results of the 6-MWT conducted in a hallway or on a treadmill are not interchangeable, because of large between-test variations in the distances walked by individual participants. © 2010, European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.

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Lenssen, A. F., Wijnen, L. C. a. m., Vankan, D. G., Eck, B. H. V., Berghmans, D. P., & Roox, G. M. (2010). Six-minute walking test done in a hallway or on a treadmill: How close do the two methods agree? European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, 17(6), 713–717. https://doi.org/10.1097/HJR.0b013e32833a1963

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