Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate potential improvements in the methodology associated with the Physical Working Capacity at the Fatigue Threshold (PWCFT) test including: (1) the use of a continuous test protocol; (2) the use of a treadmill; (3) the use of a bipolar EMG lead system for noisy electronic environments; and (4) the potential for residual fatigue from tests repeated 24 hours apart. The results of the continuous test protocol (mean +/- S.D. = 210 +/- 73 watts) correlated well (r = 0.856) with the original discontinuous technique (222 +/- 83 watts) and there was no significant (p greater than 0.05) difference between the mean values (t = 1.146). Treadmill testing required a bipolar lead system to counteract the electrical noise generated by the treadmill motor. The heart rate values which corresponded to PWCFT on the treadmill (mean +/- s.d. = 164 +/- b.p.m.) and bicycle ergometer (153 +/- 18 b.p.m.) were highly correlated (r = 0.833) and there was no significant (p greater than 0.05) difference between the mean values (t = 2.22). The use of a bipolar lead EMG system on the bicycle ergometer resulted in significantly (p less than 0.05) smaller voltage for any given power output, and the PWCFT exhibited a low to moderate correlation (r = 0.60) with PWCFT derived from a unipolar arrangement. The test-retest results of discontinuous PWCFT measurements performed 24 hours apart on the bicycle ergometer were correlated at r = 0.812 with no significant (p greater than 0.05) difference (t = 0.52) between the mean values (test = 198 +/- 60; retest = 191 +/- 63 watts).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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