Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men

Aquatic cycling is a program of physical exercises performed with immersed stationary bikes. Few studies have provided evidence about the intensity control during its practice. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to examine the concurrent and construct validity of a new scale for rating per...

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Main Author: Juan C. Colado, Roxana M. Brasil
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jssm.org/hf.php?id=jssm-18-695.xml
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spelling doaj-6ad6e8cf35ef41a9bdb091efc95ca3ac2020-11-24T21:55:20ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682019-12-0118707695707Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young MenJuan C. Colado, Roxana M. Brasil0Research Unit in Sport and Health, Research Group in Prevention and Health in Exercise and Sport, University of Valencia, SpainAquatic cycling is a program of physical exercises performed with immersed stationary bikes. Few studies have provided evidence about the intensity control during its practice. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to examine the concurrent and construct validity of a new scale for rating perceived exertion (RPE) during aquatic cycling in young men. Thirty physically active, healthy young men performed a load-incremented aquatic cycle ergometer protocol. Concurrent validity was established by correlating the Aquatic Cycling Scale (ACS) with oxygen uptake, pulmonary ventilation (VE), heart rate (HR), and blood lactate concentration (BL) responses to the maximal load-incremental test. Construct validity was established by correlating RPE derived from the Aquatic Cycling Scale (0–10) from the Borg Scale (6–20). RPE-overall, maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max), oxygen uptake indexed to body weight (VO2), VE, HR, and BL were measured during each exercise stage. The range of exercise responses across the incremental test were VO2max = 1.07–3.55 L/min, VO2 = 14.26–46.89 ml/Kg/min, VE = 23.17–138.57 L/min, HR = 99.54–173.31 beats/min, BL= 1.18–11.63 mM, ACS RPE-overall = 1.11–9.33. Correlation/regression analyses showed ACS RPE as a positive linear function of VO2max (r = 0.78; p < 0.05), VO2 (r = 0.87; p < 0.05), VE (r = 0.86; p < 0.05), HR (r = 0.77; p < 0.05), and BL (r = 0.85; p < 0.05). RPE-ACS distributed as a positive linear function of the RPE-Borg Scale (r = 0.97; p < 0.05). ANOVA indicated that an incremental pedalling cadence of 15 revolutions per minute (rpm) provoked significant differences (p < 0.05) regarding previous stages in the majority of the variables analysed. The Aquatic Cycling Scale is an appropriate tool for monitoring exertion intensity during aquatic cycling in fit men. A brief increment in aquatic pedalling cadence of 15 rpm increases the intensity of the aquatic pedalling exercise.https://www.jssm.org/hf.php?id=jssm-18-695.xmlperceived effortintensity monitoringmaximum oxygen consumptionpulmonary ventilationheart rateblood lactate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan C. Colado, Roxana M. Brasil
spellingShingle Juan C. Colado, Roxana M. Brasil
Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
perceived effort
intensity monitoring
maximum oxygen consumption
pulmonary ventilation
heart rate
blood lactate
author_facet Juan C. Colado, Roxana M. Brasil
author_sort Juan C. Colado, Roxana M. Brasil
title Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men
title_short Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men
title_full Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men
title_fullStr Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men
title_full_unstemmed Concurrent and Construct Validation of a Scale for Rating Perceived Exertion in Aquatic Cycling for Young Men
title_sort concurrent and construct validation of a scale for rating perceived exertion in aquatic cycling for young men
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Aquatic cycling is a program of physical exercises performed with immersed stationary bikes. Few studies have provided evidence about the intensity control during its practice. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to examine the concurrent and construct validity of a new scale for rating perceived exertion (RPE) during aquatic cycling in young men. Thirty physically active, healthy young men performed a load-incremented aquatic cycle ergometer protocol. Concurrent validity was established by correlating the Aquatic Cycling Scale (ACS) with oxygen uptake, pulmonary ventilation (VE), heart rate (HR), and blood lactate concentration (BL) responses to the maximal load-incremental test. Construct validity was established by correlating RPE derived from the Aquatic Cycling Scale (0–10) from the Borg Scale (6–20). RPE-overall, maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max), oxygen uptake indexed to body weight (VO2), VE, HR, and BL were measured during each exercise stage. The range of exercise responses across the incremental test were VO2max = 1.07–3.55 L/min, VO2 = 14.26–46.89 ml/Kg/min, VE = 23.17–138.57 L/min, HR = 99.54–173.31 beats/min, BL= 1.18–11.63 mM, ACS RPE-overall = 1.11–9.33. Correlation/regression analyses showed ACS RPE as a positive linear function of VO2max (r = 0.78; p < 0.05), VO2 (r = 0.87; p < 0.05), VE (r = 0.86; p < 0.05), HR (r = 0.77; p < 0.05), and BL (r = 0.85; p < 0.05). RPE-ACS distributed as a positive linear function of the RPE-Borg Scale (r = 0.97; p < 0.05). ANOVA indicated that an incremental pedalling cadence of 15 revolutions per minute (rpm) provoked significant differences (p < 0.05) regarding previous stages in the majority of the variables analysed. The Aquatic Cycling Scale is an appropriate tool for monitoring exertion intensity during aquatic cycling in fit men. A brief increment in aquatic pedalling cadence of 15 rpm increases the intensity of the aquatic pedalling exercise.
topic perceived effort
intensity monitoring
maximum oxygen consumption
pulmonary ventilation
heart rate
blood lactate
url https://www.jssm.org/hf.php?id=jssm-18-695.xml
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