The dissociation between constant work rate of O2 uptake (VO2) and ramp VO2 at a given work rate might be mitigated during slowly increasing ramp protocols. This study characterized the VO2 dynamics in response to five different ramp protocols and constant-work-rate trials at the maximal metabolic steady state (MMSS) to characterize 1) the VO2 gain (G) in the moderate, heavy, and severe domains, 2) the mean response time ofVO2 (MRT), and 3) the work rates at lactate threshold (LT) and respiratory compensation point (RCP). Eleven young individuals performed five ramp tests (5, 10, 15, 25, and 30 W/min), four to five time-to-exhaustions for critical power estimation, and two to three constant-work-rate trials for confirmation of the work rate at MMSS. G was greatest during the slowest ramp and progressively decreased with increasing ramp slopes (from ~12 to ~8 ml•min-1•W-1, P < 0.05). The MRT was smallest during the slowest ramp slopes and progressively increased with faster ramp slopes (1 ± 1, 2 ± 1, 5 ± 3, and 10 ± 4, 15 ±6 W, P < 0.05). After "left shifting" the rampVO2 by the MRT, the work rate at LT was constant regardless of the ramp slope (~150 W, P > 0.05). The work rate at MMSS was 215 ± 55 W and was similar and highly correlated with the work rate at RCP during the 5 W/min ramp (P > 0.05, r = 0.99; Lin's concordance coefficient = 0.99; bias=-3W; root mean square error = 6 W). Findings showed that the dynamics of VO2 (i.e., G) during ramp exercise explain the apparent dichotomy existing with constant-work-rate exercise. When these dynamics are appropriately "resolved", LT is constant regardless of the ramp slope of choice, and RCP and MMSS display minimal variations between each other. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study demonstrates that the dynamics of VO2 during ramp-incremental exercise are dependent on the characteristics of the increments in work rate, such that during slow-incrementing ramp protocols the magnitude of the dissociation between ramp VO2 and constant VO2 at a given work rate is reduced. Accurately accounting for these dynamics ensures correct characterizations of the VO2 kinetics at ramp onset and allows appropriate comparisons between ramp and constant-work-rate exercise-derived indexes of exercise intensity.
CITATION STYLE
Iannetta, D., De Almeida Azevedo, R., Keir, D. A., & Murias, J. M. (2019). Establishing the VO2 versus constant-work-rate relationship from rampincremental exercise: Simple strategies for an unsolved problem. Journal of Applied Physiology, 127(6), 1519–1527. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00508.2019
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.