2. What is Exercise testing?
Exercise testing elicits the body’s reaction to measured increases in
acute exercise.
The changes in heart rate, blood pressure, respiration and perceived
level of exercise provide data that permit quantitative estimation of
cardiovascular conditioning and function.
Exercise tests provide an opportunity to observe a person during
exercise.
By measuring and monitoring heart rate and blood pressure, one
can detect changes in the hemodynamic and ischemic results due
to exercise.
3. Exercise testing - assessment of the integrative exercise
responses involving
pulmonary,
cardiovascular,
haematopoietic,
neuropsychological, and
skeletal muscle systems
4. Indications of Exercise testing
Diagnosis
Unexplained dyspnea
Exercise limitation
Exercise induced asthma
Heart failure
Assessment of functional Exercise capacity
Disability evaluation
Preoperative evaluation
Prognosis in heart or pulmonary disease
7. Contraindication
Acute Ishchemic changes on ECG
Uncontrolled CHF
Uncontrolled arrythmia
Uncontrolled hypertension
3rd degree Heart block
Thrombosis in lower extremeties
Uncontrolled asthma
Pulmonary oedema
O2 saturation less than 85% in room air
Advanced or complicated pregnancy
8.
9.
10. The Fick equation
Fick equation states that oxygen uptake (VO2) equals cardiac
output times the arterial minus mixed venous oxygen content:
VO2 = (SV x HR) x (CaO2 - CvO2)
Where,
SV is the stroke volume,
HR is the heart rate,
CaO2 is the arterial oxygen content, and
CvO2 is the mixed venous oxygen content.
Oxygen uptake is often normalised for body weight and
expressed in units of ml O2/kg/min.
11. One metabolic equivalent (MET) is the resting oxygen uptake
in a sitting position and equals 3.5 ml/kg/min.
At maximal exercise, the Fick equation is expressed as follows:
VO2max = (SVmax x HRmax) x (CaO2max - CvO2max)
12. VO2 max
It is capacity of an individuals body to transport and
utilize oxygen during incremental exercise.
It reflect physical fitness of the individual.
It determine athlete capacity to perform sustained
exercise.
Normal VO2 max = 0.25-4 l/min (3.6ml/kg/min)
Highest = 60-70ml/kg (in athlete)
19. Equipment for airflow and gas
measurement
Airflow or volume transducers
Pneumotachograph
Mass flow sensor
Pitot tube flowmeter
Turbine volume transducer
Gas Analyzer
Mass spectrometer: measure O2, CO2, N2
Separate analyzer for O2, CO2
21. Maximal incremental cycle ergometry
protocols
IET protocol
3 minutes of rest, then 3 minutes of unloaded pedalling then the
incremental phase of exercise every minute (5 to 25 W/minute) until the
patient reaches volitional exhaustion or the test is terminated by the
medical monitor
Ramp protocol
increase the work rate continuously, usually every 1 to 2 seconds in a
ramplike fashion
Standardized exponential exercise protocol
work rate is increased exponentially by 15% of the previous workload
every minute
22. Maximal incremental treadmill
protocols
Bruce protocol:
the starting point (ie, stage 1) is 1.7 mph at a 10% grade (5
METs).
Stage 2 is 2.5 mph at a 12% grade (7 METs).
Stage 3 is 3.4 mph at a 14% grade (9 METs).
This protocol includes 3-minute periods to allow achievement
of a steady state before workload is increased.
Modified Bruce protocol
2 warm up stages, each lasting 3 minutes.
The first is at 1.7 mph and a 0% grade,
the second is at 1.7 mph and a 5% grade
23. Constant work rate protocol
Treadmill or cycle ergometry exercise at levels
approximating the subject’s usual daily activities (e.g.,
up to 3.0 mph on a treadmill, or up to 50 W on a
cycle ergometer).
This test should involve at least 6 minutes of
continuous exercise.