Abstract
Background and Objectives: The prevalence of chronic diseases increases with age, and in octogenarian elderly, a cardiorespiratory test with gas analysis is more effective in determining the risk of mortality than applying the conventional risk factors. Materials and Methods: 25 untrained non-frail octogenarian subjects (four men) performed a submaximal test with gas analysis, which was stopped after the second ventilatory threshold (VT2) was reached. The variables analyzed were oxygen consumption at the first threshold (VO(2) VT1); ventilatory class (VE/VCO(2)); oxygen uptake efficiency slope (OUES); cardiorespiratory optimal point (COP); oxygen pulse difference between VT2 and VT1 (diff. VO(2)/HR VT2-VT1). Results: the variables were classified categorically based on cut-off points present in the literature, where the variable with the highest percentage of altered cases was dif. VO2/HR VT2-VT1 at 48%; followed by VO(2) VT1 at 40%, OUES at 36%, COP at 32%, and VE/VCO(2) at 24%. Chi-square analysis between the measured parameters defined that normal and altered variables were related to each other, except for the variable VE/VCO(2) and OUES. Conclusions: it was found that the main altered variable was the oxygen pulse and the least altered variable was VCO(2)/VCO(2); there was only a statistically significant difference in a pair of OUES vs. VE/VCO(2) variables.