Trying to quantify your aerobic
fitness is a daunting task. It usually requires access to an
exercise-physiology lab. But researchers at the Norwegian University of Science
and Technology in Trondheim have developed a remarkably low-tech means of
precisely assessing aerobic fitness and estimating your “fitness age,” or how
well your body functions physically, relative to how well it should work, given
your age.
The researchers evaluated almost
5,000 Norwegians between the ages of 20 and 90, using mobile labs. They took
about a dozen measurements, including height, body mass index, resting heart
rate, HDL and total cholesterol levels. Each person also filled out a lengthy
lifestyle questionnaire. Finally, each volunteer ran to the point of exhaustion
on a treadmill to pinpoint his or her peak oxygen intake (VO2 max), or how well
the body delivers oxygen to its cells. VO2 max has been shown in large-scale
studies to closely correlate with significantly augmented life spans, even
among the elderly or overweight. In other words, VO2 max can indicate fitness
age.
Fitness and Estimating your "Fitness Age" - A Research by Norwegian University |
In order to figure out how to
estimate VO2 max without a treadmill, the scientists combed through the results
to determine which of the data points were most useful. You might expect that
the most taxing physical tests would yield the most reliable results. Instead,
the researchers found that putting just five measurements — waist
circumference; resting heart rate; frequency and intensity of exercise; age;
and sex — into an algorithm allowed them to predict a person’s VO2 max with
noteworthy accuracy, according to their study, published in the journal
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
The researchers used the data set
to tabulate the typical, desirable VO2 max for a healthy person at every age
from 20 to 90, creating specific parameters for fitness age. The concept is
simple enough, explains Ulrik Wisloff, the director of the K. G. Jebsen Center
of Exercise in Medicine at the Norwegian University and the senior author of
the study. “A 70-year-old man or woman who has the peak oxygen uptake of a
20-year-old has a fitness age of 20,” he says. He has seen just this
combination during his research.
The researchers have used all of
this data to create an online calculatorthat allows people to determine their
VO2 max without going to a lab. You’ll need your waist measurement and your
resting heart rate. To determine it, sit quietly for 10 minutes and check your
pulse; count for 30 seconds, double the number and you have your resting heart
rate. Plug these numbers, along with your age, sex and frequency and intensity
of exercise, into the calculator, and you’ll learn your fitness age.
The results can be sobering. A
50-year-old man, for instance, who exercises moderately a few times a week,
sports a 36-inch waist and a resting heart rate of 75 — not atypical values for
healthy middle-aged men — will have a fitness age of 59. Thankfully, unwanted
fitness years, unlike the chronological kind, can be erased, Dr. Wisloff says.
Exercise more frequently or more intensely. Then replug your numbers and exult
as your “age” declines. A youthful fitness age, Dr. Wisloff says, “is the
single best predictor of current and future health.”
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