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Scaling VO<sub>2</sub>max to body size differences to evaluate associations to CVD incidence and all-cause mortality risk

Jane Salier Eriksson, Björn Ekblom, Gunnar Andersson, Peter Wallin, Elin Ekblom‐Bak

2021BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective To evaluate and compare ratio and allometric scaling models of maximal oxygen consumption (VO 2 max) for different body size measurements in relation to cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and all-cause mortality. Methods 316 116 individuals participating in occupational health screenings, initially free from CVD, were included. VO 2 max was estimated using submaximal cycle test. Height, body mass and waist circumference (WC) were assessed, and eight different scaling models (two evaluated in a restricted sample with WC data) were derived. Participants were followed in national registers for first-time CVD event or all-cause mortality from their health screening to first CVD event, death or 31 December 2015. Results Increasing deciles of VO 2 max showed lower CVD risk and all-cause mortality for all six models in the full sample (p&lt;0.001) as well as with increasing quintiles in the restricted sample (eight models) (p&lt;0.001). For CVD risk and all-cause mortality, significantly weaker associations with increasing deciles for models 1 (L·min −1 ) and 5 (mL·min −1 ·height −2 ) were seen compared with model 2 (mL·min −1 ·kg −1 ), (CVD, p&lt;0.00001; p&lt;0.00001: all-cause mortality, p=0.008; p=0.001) and in some subgroups. For CVD, model 6 (mL·min −1 ·(kg 1 ·height −1 ) −1 ) had a stronger association compared with model 2 (p&lt;0.00001) and in some subgroups. In the restricted sample, trends for significantly stronger associations for models including WC compared with model 2 were seen in women for both CVD and all-cause mortality, and those under 50 for CVD. Conclusion In association to CVD and all-cause mortality, only small differences were found between ratio scaling and allometric scaling models where body dimensions were added, with some stronger associations when adding WC in the models.

Topics & Concepts

Incidence (geometry)ScalingMedicineDemographyMathematicsSociologyGeometryDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and LipoproteinsBody Composition Measurement TechniquesHealth disparities and outcomes
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