Arm cranking versus wheelchair propulsion for testing aerobic fitness in children with spina bifida who are wheelchair dependent.

Authors

  • Manon A.T. Bloemen
  • Janke F. de Groot
  • Frank J.G. Backx
  • Rosalyne A. Westerveld
  • Tim Takken

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-1944

Keywords:

child, spinal dysraphism, wheelchair, exercise, physical fitness.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the best test performance and feasibility using a Graded Arm Cranking Test vs a Graded Wheelchair Propulsion Test in young people with spina bifida who use a wheelchair, and to determine the reliability of the best test. DESIGN: Validity and reliability study. SUBJECTS: Young people with spina bifida who use a wheelchair. METHODS: Physiological responses were measured during a Graded Arm Cranking Test and a Graded Wheelchair Propulsion Test using a heart rate monitor and calibrated mobile gas analysis system (Cortex Metamax). For validity, peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) and peak heart rate (HRpeak) were compared using paired t-tests. For reliability, the intra-class correlation coefficients, standard error of measurement, and standard detectable change were calculated. RESULTS: VO2peak and HRpeak were higher during wheelchair propulsion compared with arm cranking (23.1 vs 19.5 ml/kg/min, p = 0.11

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Published

2015-04-10

How to Cite

Bloemen, M. A., de Groot, J. F., Backx, F. J., Westerveld, R. A., & Takken, T. (2015). Arm cranking versus wheelchair propulsion for testing aerobic fitness in children with spina bifida who are wheelchair dependent. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 47(5), 432–437. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-1944

Issue

Section

Original Report