School of Nutrition and Health Promotion, Healthy Lifestyles Research Center, Arizona State University , Phoenix, Arizona.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2018 Feb 1;124(2):414-420. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00789.2017. Epub 2017 Nov 16.
To determine whether age affects cycling efficiency and the energy cost of walking (Cw), 190 healthy adults, ages 18-81 yr, cycled on an ergometer at 50 W and walked on a treadmill at 1.34 m/s. Ventilation and gas exchange at rest and during exercise were used to calculate net Cw and net efficiency of cycling. Compared with the 18-40 yr age group (2.17 ± 0.33 J·kg·m), net Cw was not different in the 60-64 yr (2.20 ± 0.40 J·kg·m) and 65-69 yr (2.20 ± 0.28 J·kg·m) age groups, but was significantly ( P < 0.03) higher in the ≥70 yr (2.37 ± 0.33 J·kg·m) age group. For subjects >60 yr, net Cw was significantly correlated with age ( R = 0.123; P = 0.002). Cycling net efficiency was not different between 18-40 yr (23.5 ± 2.9%), 60-64 yr (24.5 ± 3.6%), 65-69 yr (23.3 ± 3.6%) and ≥70 yr (24.7 ± 2.7%) age groups. Repeat tests on a subset of subjects (walking, n = 43; cycling, n = 37) demonstrated high test-retest reliability [intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), 0.74-0.86] for all energy outcome measures except cycling net energy expenditure (ICC = 0.54) and net efficiency (ICC = 0.50). Coefficients of variation for all variables ranged from 3.1 to 7.7%. Considerable individual variation in Cw and efficiency was evident, with a ~2-fold difference between the least and most economical/efficient subjects. We conclude that, between 18 and 81 yr, net Cw was only higher for ages ≥70 yr, and that cycling net efficiency was not different across age groups. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study illustrates that the higher energy cost of walking in older adults is only evident for ages ≥70 yr. For older adults ages 60-69 yr, the energy cost of walking is similar to that of young adults. Cycling efficiency, by contrast, is not different across age groups. Considerable individual variation (∼2-fold) in cycling efficiency and energy cost of walking is observed in young and older adults.
为了确定年龄是否影响骑行效率和步行的能量消耗(Cw),190 名 18-81 岁的健康成年人在测功仪上以 50 W 骑行,并在跑步机上以 1.34 m/s 的速度行走。在休息和运动时使用通气和气体交换来计算净 Cw 和净骑行效率。与 18-40 岁年龄组(2.17±0.33 J·kg·m)相比,60-64 岁(2.20±0.40 J·kg·m)和 65-69 岁(2.20±0.28 J·kg·m)年龄组的净 Cw 没有差异,但≥70 岁年龄组(2.37±0.33 J·kg·m)的净 Cw 显著更高(P<0.03)。对于>60 岁的受试者,净 Cw 与年龄呈显著相关(R=0.123;P=0.002)。23.5±2.9%)、65-69 岁(23.3±3.6%)和≥70 岁(24.7±2.7%)年龄组之间的差异无统计学意义。对一组受试者(行走,n=43;骑行,n=37)的重复测试表明,除了骑行净能量消耗(ICC=0.54)和净效率(ICC=0.50)外,所有能量结果测量的测试-重测可靠性均很高[组内相关系数(ICC),0.74-0.86]。所有变量的变异系数范围为 3.1%至 7.7%。Cw 和效率的个体差异很大,最经济/效率最高和最低的受试者之间存在约 2 倍的差异。我们的结论是,在 18 至 81 岁之间,只有年龄≥70 岁的人步行的净能量消耗更高,而各年龄组之间的骑行净效率没有差异。本研究表明,老年人步行的能量消耗较高仅见于年龄≥70 岁的人群。对于 60-69 岁的老年人,步行的能量消耗与年轻人相似。相比之下,骑行效率在各年龄组之间没有差异。在年轻和老年人中观察到骑行效率和步行能量消耗的个体差异(约 2 倍)相当大。