This study demonstrated that a large scale training program is feasible for healthy older people, that physiologic improvements can be measured after 16 weeks of low-to-moderate-intensity training, and that mechanisms of adaptation to exercise may be different in elderly subjects from those in younger ones.
The purpose of this study is to present measurement of ventilatory threshold (VeT) and maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) in a large group of predominantly older subjects using a bicycle ergometer and an automated measuring system. One hundred and twenty-seven healthy elderly subjects (mean age: 68) and 44 young and middle-aged subjects (mean age: 39) underwent a maximal exercise test with breath-by-breath measurement of ventilation and gas exchange variables. Ventilatory threshold was determined by visual inspection of the breakpoints in the VE/VO2 and PETO2 data curves. Additional measures were made in a subset of subjects to determine the reproducibility and interobserver variability of VeT and the relationship between VeT and the venous lactate threshold (LaT). Day-to-day reproducibility of VeT was good with a mean difference in VO2 at VeT on two occasions of 40.23 +/- 125 ml/min. Interobserver variability was low (intraclass correlation coefficient of r = 0.941) and VeT was found to correlate to LaT (r = 0.79, P less than 0.05) with LaT occurring a mean 2.3 min after VeT. VeT declined significantly with age in both males and females but less rapidly than VO2max. Both VO2max and VeT were found to vary with age, sex, height, and weight in a stepwise multiple-linear regression analysis. Age-associated changes in skeletal muscle composition may be in part responsible for the less precipitous decline in VeT with age compared with VO2max.
To examine the long-term effects of aerobic exercise on the occurrence and time to onset of cardiovascular diagnoses, 184 initially healthy older subjects were randomized into either a long-term exercise group (Group A, n = 80), a short-term exercise group (Group B, n = 42), or a contract control group (Group C, n = 62). After completion of two years in the study, data on new cardiovascular diagnoses and time to onset of these diagnoses in each of the three groups were compared. The occurrence rates for new onset diagnoses were as follows: Group A, 2.5%; Group B, 2%; and Group C, 13%; the average time to onset was greatest for the long-term exercisers and shortest for the contact control group (P less than or equal to .02). The results suggest that a regular program of exercise may have cardiovascular benefits for those over 60 years of age.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.