Validity and reliability of the Moxy oxygen monitor during incremental cycling exercise
2017; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 17; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/17461391.2017.1330899
ISSN1746-1391
AutoresEmma May Crum, William James O'Connor, Lauren van Loo, M. Valckx, Stephen R. Stannard,
Tópico(s)Sports injuries and prevention
ResumoAbstract Introduction: The Moxy is a novel, cutaneously placed muscle oxygen monitor which claims to measure local oxygen saturation (SmO 2 ) and total haemoglobin (THb) using near‐infrared spectroscopy. If shown to be reliable, its data storage and telemetric capability will be useful for assessing localised O 2 usage during field‐based exercise. This study investigated the reliability of the Moxy during cycling and assessed the correlations between its measurements, whole‐body O 2 consumption (VO 2 ) and heart rate (HR). Methods: Ten highly trained cyclists performed an incremental, step‐wise cycling protocol on two occasions while wearing the Moxy. SmO 2 , THb, VO 2 and HR were recorded in the final minute of each five‐minute stage. Data were analysed using Spearman's Order‐Rank Coefficient (SROC), Intraclass Correlation (ICC), and Coefficient of Variance (COV). Significance was set at p ≤ .05. Results: SmO 2 showed a ‘strong’ or ‘very large’ correlation between trials (SROC: r = 0.842–0.993, ICC: r = 0.773–0.992, p ≤ .01) and was moderately correlated with VO 2 and HR ( r = −0.71–0.73, p ≤ .01). SmO 2 showed a moderate to high reliability at low intensities, but this decreased as relative exercise intensity increased. THb showed poor correlations between tests and with the other measured variables, but was highly reliable at all power outputs. Conclusions: The Moxy is a reliable device to measure SmO 2 at low to moderate intensities, but at higher intensities, greater variation in measurements occurs, likely due to tissue ischaemia or increased movement artefacts due to more frequent muscular contractions. THb has low variation during exercise, and does not appear to be a valid indicator of muscle oxygenation.
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