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- W2890831040 abstract "In 2016, the American Heart Association (AHA) produced a position paper on cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) which defined CRF as the most important cardiac risk factor in the assessment of prognosis in a wide variety of clinical states [ [1] Ross R. Blair S.N. Arena R. Church T.S. Despres J.P. Franklin B.A. et al. Importance of assessing cardiorespiratory fitness in clinical practice: a case for fitness as a vital clinical sign: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2016; 134: e653-e699 Crossref PubMed Scopus (1108) Google Scholar ]. The aim of the paper was to improve patient management and to encourage life-style based strategies designed to improve cardiovascular risk. The authors showed that: •Cardiorespiratory fitness was a stronger predictor of patient survival than other clinical and exercise test variables in both men and women. •Non-exercise cardiac risk factors clustered in unfit people. •People unable to exercise to five METs were at the highest risk of premature mortality. (1 MET = 3.5ml/kg/minute of oxygen intake). •Improvement in CRF from the least fit to intermediate CRF reduced the mortality risk more than an increase in CRF from the intermediate CRF group to the high CFR group. •They showed that adding a measure of CRF to baseline risk factors better predicted mortality in a wide variety of subjects with various clinical presentations. •That adding measures of CRF to prediction models, particularly those based on the Framingham Risk Score, improved estimations of risk of cardiovascular disease. •That CRF can be reasonably well predicted from a standardised questionnaire. In this Brief Communication, we expand on how CRF can be assessed and reported in exercise testing. In 2016, the American Heart Association (AHA) produced a position paper on cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) which defined CRF as the most important cardiac risk factor in the assessment of prognosis in a wide variety of clinical states [ [1] Ross R. Blair S.N. Arena R. Church T.S. Despres J.P. Franklin B.A. et al. Importance of assessing cardiorespiratory fitness in clinical practice: a case for fitness as a vital clinical sign: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2016; 134: e653-e699 Crossref PubMed Scopus (1108) Google Scholar ]. The aim of the paper was to improve patient management and to encourage life-style based strategies designed to improve cardiovascular risk. The authors showed that: •Cardiorespiratory fitness was a stronger predictor of patient survival than other clinical and exercise test variables in both men and women. •Non-exercise cardiac risk factors clustered in unfit people. •People unable to exercise to five METs were at the highest risk of premature mortality. (1 MET = 3.5ml/kg/minute of oxygen intake). •Improvement in CRF from the least fit to intermediate CRF reduced the mortality risk more than an increase in CRF from the intermediate CRF group to the high CFR group. •They showed that adding a measure of CRF to baseline risk factors better predicted mortality in a wide variety of subjects with various clinical presentations. •That adding measures of CRF to prediction models, particularly those based on the Framingham Risk Score, improved estimations of risk of cardiovascular disease. •That CRF can be reasonably well predicted from a standardised questionnaire. In this Brief Communication, we expand on how CRF can be assessed and reported in exercise testing." @default.
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- W2890831040 date "2019-04-01" @default.
- W2890831040 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W2890831040 title "Implications of Cardio-Respiratory Fitness on the Performance of Exercise Tests" @default.
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- W2890831040 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2018.07.015" @default.
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