Abstract

Thus, the aim of this study was to compare contemporary gold-standard approaches for exercise prescription based on fixed percentages of maximum values to the well-established, but underutilized, "domain" schema of exercise intensity. One hundred individuals participated in the study (women, 46; men, 54). A cardiopulmonary ramp-incremental test was performed to assess V˙O2max, WRpeak, HRmax, and the lactate threshold (LT), and submaximal constant-work rate trials of 30-min duration to determine the maximal lactate steady-state (MLSS). The LT and MLSS were used to partition the intensity spectrum for each individual in three domains of intensity: moderate, heavy, and severe. V˙O2max in women and men was 3.06 ± 0.41 L·min and 4.10 ± 0.56 L·min, respectively. Lactate threshold and MLSS occurred at a greater %V˙O2max and %HRmax in women compared with men (P < 0.05). The large ranges in both sexes at which LT and MLSS occurred on the basis of %V˙O2max (LT, 45%-74%; MLSS, 69%-96%), %WRpeak (LT, 23%-57%; MLSS, 44%-71%), and %HRmax (LT, 60%-90%; MLSS, 75%-97%) elicited large variability in the number of individuals distributed in each domain at the fixed-percentages examined. Contemporary gold-standard methods for exercise prescription based on fixed-percentages of maximum values conform poorly to exercise intensity domains and thus do not adequately control the metabolic stimulus.

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