OBJECTIVE To assess the reliability and reproducibility of using a four arterial occlusions protocol and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to measure resting and post-exercise muscle oxidative metabolism (mVO2). APPROACH mVO2 was… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVE To assess the reliability and reproducibility of using a four arterial occlusions protocol and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to measure resting and post-exercise muscle oxidative metabolism (mVO2). APPROACH mVO2 was measured on the forearm muscles on two different days (day1 and day2) within one week in 11 healthy young adults (24.2 ± 2.7 years; 5 males). mVO2 was measured using NIRS during four repeated arterial occlusions at rest, and 5 minutes after exercise consisting of 90 seconds of rapid concentric contractions (5minEPOC). MAIN RESULTS Resting mVO2 with four measurements was 17.88 ± 3.04%/min on day one and 19.42 ± 3.03%/min on day two (p = 0.171) with a coefficient of variation (CV) of 10.1%. When using only the first measurement, the CV increased to 18.5% (p = 0.039). 5minEPOC was 212.4 ± 142.5% and 177.1 ± 125.8% higher than resting and was not different between days one and two (53.83 ± 21.17%/min and 52.22 ± 22.10%/min, respectively, p = 0.199). The CV and intraclass correlation (ICC) for 5minEPOC between days one and two were, 6.5% and 0.98, respectively. Using only the first value for 5minEPOC resulted in slightly higher CV but similar ICC (7.6% and 0.98, respectively; both p > 0.05). SIGNIFICANCE Our results suggest that within a single testing session, one arterial occlusion can provide reproducible measurements for both resting and post-exercise mVO2 similar to that of a four arterial occlusions protocol. While a four arterial occlusion protocol provides similar reliability for post-exercise mVO2 with one arterial occlusion, it reduces the day-to-day variance for resting mVO2 and therefore should be employed for longitudinal studies.
               
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