Body Composition Is Related to Maximal Effort Treadmill Test Time in Firefighters

oleh: Benjamin J. Mendelson, Rudi A. Marciniak, Carly A. Wahl, Kyle T. Ebersole

Format: Article
Diterbitkan: MDPI AG 2023-05-01

Deskripsi

Firefighting tasks may require near maximal levels of cardiorespiratory fitness. Previous research has indicated that body fat percentage (BF%) and aerobic capacity (VO<sub>2peak</sub>) are related to the performance of firefighting tasks. Since a standard submaximal treadmill test for firefighters is terminated at 85% of maximal heart rate (MHR), key performance information relating to maximal cardiorespiratory effort may not be measured in a submaximal test. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationships between body composition and time spent running at intensities greater that 85% MHR. Height, weight, body mass index (BMI; kg/m<sup>2</sup>), BF%, MHR (bpm), VO<sub>2peak</sub> (mL/kg/min), predicted VO<sub>2peak</sub> (P-VO<sub>2peak</sub>; mL/kg/min), submaximal treadmill test time (WFI<sub>sub</sub> Test Time; min), and maximal treadmill test time (WFI<sub>max</sub> Test Time; min) were collected in fifteen active-duty firefighters. The results indicated that significant relationships (<i>p</i> < 0.05) existed between BF% and VO<sub>2peak</sub>, BF% and WFI<sub>max</sub> Test Time, BF% and T<sub>diff</sub>, and VO<sub>2peak</sub> and WFI<sub>max</sub> Test Time. P-VO<sub>2peak</sub> was not significantly different than VO<sub>2peak</sub>, and the WFI<sub>max</sub> Test Time was significantly longer than the WFI<sub>sub</sub> Test Time. These results indicate that a submaximal treadmill test may reasonably predict VO<sub>2peak</sub>, but key information about physiological work at intensities greater than 85% MHR may be missed when using submaximal effort tests.