Compara mètodes
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| VO2 Max (Protocol de Bruce)× | Potència crítica (Monod)× | EPOC× | Llindar de lactat (OBLA)× | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Camp | Ciències de l'esport | Ciències de l'esport | Ciències de l'esport | Ciències de l'esport |
| Família | Hypothesis test | Hypothesis test | Hypothesis test | Hypothesis test |
| Any d'origen≠ | 1963 | 1965 | 1986 | 1973 |
| Autor original≠ | Robert Bruce | Henry Monod | Brehm & Gutin | Klaus Wasserman |
| Tipus≠ | graded maximal exercise test | power-duration model | post-exercise metabolic measurement | incremental blood sampling test |
| Font seminal≠ | Bruce, R. A. (1963). Evaluation of functional capacity and exercise tolerance of cardiac patients. Modern Concepts of Cardiovascular Disease, 32(4), 1-4. link ↗ | Monod, H., & Scherrer, J. (1965). The work capacity of a synergic muscular group. Ergonomics, 8(3), 329-338. DOI ↗ | Brehm, B. A., & Gutin, B. (1986). Recovery energy expenditure for steady state exercise in runners and non-runners. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 18(4), 441-446. link ↗ | Wasserman, K., Whipp, B. J., Koyal, S. N., & Beaver, W. L. (1973). Anaerobic threshold and respiratory gas exchange during exercise. Journal of Applied Physiology, 35(2), 236-243. DOI ↗ |
| Àlies≠ | maximal aerobic capacity, aerobic power, cardiorespiratory fitness | CP model, power-duration relationship, anaerobic capacity, critical torque | afterburn effect, recovery oxygen uptake, post-exercise metabolic elevation, APMR | OBLA, anaerobic threshold, lactate turnpoint, maximal lactate steady state |
| Relacionats | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Resum≠ | VO2 max represents the maximum amount of oxygen a person can utilize during intense exercise, measured in millilitres of oxygen per kilogram of body weight per minute (ml/kg/min). Developed by Robert Bruce in 1963, the Bruce Protocol is a graded maximal exercise test on a motorized treadmill that incrementally increases speed and incline until the subject reaches volitional exhaustion. This test is a gold standard in clinical and sports medicine for assessing cardiorespiratory fitness and aerobic capacity. | Critical power (CP) is the highest power output that can be sustained indefinitely without fatigue, representing the boundary between sustainable and unsustainable exercise. Introduced by Henry Monod and Scherrer in 1965, the critical power model describes the hyperbolic relationship between power output and time-to-exhaustion. The model partitions work capacity into two components: critical power (the aerobic ceiling) and anaerobic work capacity (the maximal work that can be performed above critical power before depletion). This framework is widely used in exercise physiology, sports science, and occupational biomechanics. | Excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC), commonly called the 'afterburn effect', is the elevated rate of oxygen uptake and metabolic activity that persists after exercise ends. First systematically studied by Brehm and Gutin (1986), EPOC reflects the energy cost of restoring homeostasis after physical exertion. During recovery, the body must replenish phosphate stores, clear lactate, restore oxygen debt to muscles, increase body temperature, and return cardiovascular and respiratory function to baseline. This lingering metabolic elevation results in continued calorie burning long after exercise stops, a phenomenon of significant interest in sports science and fitness. | Lactate threshold, also termed the onset of blood lactate accumulation (OBLA), is the exercise intensity at which blood lactate concentration increases rapidly and non-linearly. Initially defined by Klaus Wasserman in 1973, the concept describes the physiological transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism. As exercise intensity increases, lactate production and clearance remain balanced until a critical threshold is exceeded, after which lactate rapidly accumulates in the blood, signaling a shift toward anaerobic energy pathways. This parameter is crucial in endurance sports and clinical exercise assessment. |
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