Artigo Revisado por pares

Examination of the Moxus Modular Metabolic System by the Douglas-bag technique

2012; NRC Research Press; Volume: 37; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1139/h2012-056

ISSN

1715-5320

Autores

Jon Ingulf Medbø, Asgeir Mamen, Fernando G. Beltrami,

Tópico(s)

Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control

Resumo

The purpose of this study was to examine the performance of the Moxus Modular Metabolic System from AEI Technologies, Inc. using the Douglas-bag method as reference. To achieve this, eight moderately trained subjects cycled for 5 min at constant powers from 50 to 300 W in increments of 50 W. The O₂ uptake was measured simultaneously by both systems during the last minute of each stage. The O₂ uptake reported by the Moxus system was 83 ± 78 mL·min⁻¹ higher (mean ± SD; ≈3%, +62 µmol·s⁻¹, P < 0.001) than that reported by the Douglas-bag method; the bias varied by ≈2% between the subjects. The higher O₂ uptake of the Moxus system was a consequence of 1.4% ± 3.0% higher reported ventilation and 2% ± 3% higher reported O₂ extraction per volume of air breathed. The respiratory exchange ratio (R value) reported by the Moxus system rose proportionally to that of the Douglas-bag method and was 1% ± 2% higher for the range examined (0.75-1.10). Repeated tests of the maximal O₂ uptake showed a variability (coefficient of variation) of 2.5%. The study concluded that measurements by the Moxus system showed some bias and residual variation and, in addition, some systematic differences between the subjects in the O₂ uptake. The R value was reported quite accurately with moderate random error. Although there were some computer software and hardware instability problems that need to be solved, the Moxus system worked quite well and provided data more reliable than those of most commercial instruments.

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