J. Vásquez-Gómez, Marcelo Castillo-Retamal, R. Carvalho, César Faúndez-Casanova, Moacyr Portes Junior
{"title":"Prueba de caminata de seis minutos ¿es posible predecir el consumo de oxígeno en personas con patologías? Una revisión bibliográfica","authors":"J. Vásquez-Gómez, Marcelo Castillo-Retamal, R. Carvalho, César Faúndez-Casanova, Moacyr Portes Junior","doi":"10.15359/MHS.16-1.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"espanolLa prueba de caminata de seis minutos (PC6M) consiste en recorrer la mayor distancia posible y se caracteriza por ser una prueba de facil realizacion. El objetivo de esta revision fue examinar la relacion entre las variables de distancia recorrida, patologias cardiacas, pulmonares y el consumo de oxigeno de una prueba de criterio en cinta rodante y cicloergometro, y las ecuaciones de prediccion del VO2 en la PC6M de Maldonado e Ingle (2006), Vanhelst (2013) y Costa (2017) para personas con patologias. El manuscrito es una revision bibliografica que utilizo las bases de datos Scopus y WOS, con articulos en ingles, espanol y portugues entre 2000 y 2017. La distancia es la variable que mas se midio y que mas se asocio con el VO2, encontrandose correlaciones significativas con valores de 0.01 hasta 0.8, las patologias mas relacionadas con el VO2 max. fueron la hipertension pulmonar, enfermedad pulmonar obstructiva, insuficiencia cardiaca, disfuncion sistolica ventricular y accidente cerebro-vascular y el cicloergometro fue el mas utilizado en las pruebas de criterio de VO2 max. Solo una ecuacion fue elaborada para ninos que eran obesos la que incluyo distancia e IMC (Vanhelst), otra ecuacion fue para adultos con enfermedad cardiaca que ademas incluia el sexo (Costa), una en pacientes con disfuncion sistolica ventricular que aparte incorporo la edad, volumen espiratorio y hemoglobina (Ingle) y otra formula fue para adultos con insuficiencia cardiaca que considero la distancia (Maldonado). Se sugiere utilizar la ecuacion mas apropiada y elaborar modelos predictivos para personas con diversas caracteristicas. EnglishThe six-minute walk test (SMWT) consists of walking as far as possible and is characterized by being an easy test to perform. This paper examines the relationship between the three variables of distance traveled, cardiac and pulmonary pathologies, and the oxygen consumption of a criterion test on treadmill and/or cycle ergometer, and the prediction equations of VO2 in the SMWT of Maldonado and Ingle (2006), Vanhelst (2013) and Costa (2017) for people with pathologies. The paper is a bibliographic review that used the Scopus and WOS databases containing articles in English, Spanish and Portuguese, published between 2000 and 2017. Distance is the variable that was most measured, and it was most associated with VO2; correlations with values from 0.01 to 0.8 were found. The pathologies most related to VO2 max were pulmonary hypertension, obstructive pulmonary disease, and ventricular heart failure and stroke; and the cycle ergometer was the most commonly used in the VO2 max criterion tests. Only one equation was created for children who were obese; it included distance and BMI (Vanhelst). Another equation was generated for adults with heart disease that also included sex (Costa). Besides, one equation was for patients with ventricular systolic dysfunction that also incorporated age, volume expiratory and hemoglobin (Ingle); another one was created for adults with heart failure, and this formula considered the distance (Maldonado). It is suggested to use the most appropriate equation and create predictive models for people with different characteristics.","PeriodicalId":40930,"journal":{"name":"MHSalud-Revista en Ciencias del Movimiento Humano y la Salud","volume":"16 1","pages":"1-17"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2017-11-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.15359/MHS.16-1.1","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"MHSalud-Revista en Ciencias del Movimiento Humano y la Salud","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15359/MHS.16-1.1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"SPORT SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
espanolLa prueba de caminata de seis minutos (PC6M) consiste en recorrer la mayor distancia posible y se caracteriza por ser una prueba de facil realizacion. El objetivo de esta revision fue examinar la relacion entre las variables de distancia recorrida, patologias cardiacas, pulmonares y el consumo de oxigeno de una prueba de criterio en cinta rodante y cicloergometro, y las ecuaciones de prediccion del VO2 en la PC6M de Maldonado e Ingle (2006), Vanhelst (2013) y Costa (2017) para personas con patologias. El manuscrito es una revision bibliografica que utilizo las bases de datos Scopus y WOS, con articulos en ingles, espanol y portugues entre 2000 y 2017. La distancia es la variable que mas se midio y que mas se asocio con el VO2, encontrandose correlaciones significativas con valores de 0.01 hasta 0.8, las patologias mas relacionadas con el VO2 max. fueron la hipertension pulmonar, enfermedad pulmonar obstructiva, insuficiencia cardiaca, disfuncion sistolica ventricular y accidente cerebro-vascular y el cicloergometro fue el mas utilizado en las pruebas de criterio de VO2 max. Solo una ecuacion fue elaborada para ninos que eran obesos la que incluyo distancia e IMC (Vanhelst), otra ecuacion fue para adultos con enfermedad cardiaca que ademas incluia el sexo (Costa), una en pacientes con disfuncion sistolica ventricular que aparte incorporo la edad, volumen espiratorio y hemoglobina (Ingle) y otra formula fue para adultos con insuficiencia cardiaca que considero la distancia (Maldonado). Se sugiere utilizar la ecuacion mas apropiada y elaborar modelos predictivos para personas con diversas caracteristicas. EnglishThe six-minute walk test (SMWT) consists of walking as far as possible and is characterized by being an easy test to perform. This paper examines the relationship between the three variables of distance traveled, cardiac and pulmonary pathologies, and the oxygen consumption of a criterion test on treadmill and/or cycle ergometer, and the prediction equations of VO2 in the SMWT of Maldonado and Ingle (2006), Vanhelst (2013) and Costa (2017) for people with pathologies. The paper is a bibliographic review that used the Scopus and WOS databases containing articles in English, Spanish and Portuguese, published between 2000 and 2017. Distance is the variable that was most measured, and it was most associated with VO2; correlations with values from 0.01 to 0.8 were found. The pathologies most related to VO2 max were pulmonary hypertension, obstructive pulmonary disease, and ventricular heart failure and stroke; and the cycle ergometer was the most commonly used in the VO2 max criterion tests. Only one equation was created for children who were obese; it included distance and BMI (Vanhelst). Another equation was generated for adults with heart disease that also included sex (Costa). Besides, one equation was for patients with ventricular systolic dysfunction that also incorporated age, volume expiratory and hemoglobin (Ingle); another one was created for adults with heart failure, and this formula considered the distance (Maldonado). It is suggested to use the most appropriate equation and create predictive models for people with different characteristics.