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Blood Volume, Hemoglobin Mass, and Peak Oxygen Uptake in Older Adults: The Generation 100 Study

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Date 2021 Apr 19
PMID 33870187
Citations 5
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Abstract

To investigate the association between blood volume, hemoglobin mass (Hb), and peak oxygen uptake (VO) in healthy older adults. Fifty fit or unfit participants from the prospective randomized Generation 100 Study ( = 1,566) were included (age- and sex-specific VO above or below average values). Blood, plasma, and erythrocyte volume and Hb were tested using the carbon monoxide rebreathing method within 1 week after VO testing. Mean age, BMI, Hb, blood volume, and VO were 73.0 ± 2.1 years, 24.8 ± 3.3 kg·m, 10.0 ± 1.7 g·kg, 76.4 ± 11.8 mL·kg, and 33.5 ± 8.4 mL·kg·min. VO in fit and unfit participants and women and men were 38.6 ± 6.5 and 25.8 ± 3.8 mL·kg·min, 30.7 ± 7.6 mL·kg·min, and 35.5 ± 8.5 mL·kg·min, respectively. Women were shorter (Δ14 cm), leaner (Δ13 kg), and with less muscle mass (Δ9%) than men ( < 0.05). Relative erythrocyte volume and Hb were lower in women, and blood and erythrocyte volume and Hb were higher in the fit participants ( < 0.05). Hb and erythrocyte volume explained 40 and 37%, respectively, of the variability in VO, with a limited effect of physical-activity adjustment (40 and 38%, respectively). Blood and plasma volume explained 15 and 25%, respectively, of VO variability, and the association was strengthened adjusting for physical activity (25 and 31%, respectively), indicating a training-dependent adaptation in plasma but not erythrocyte volume ( ≤ 0.006). Blood and plasma volumes were moderately associated with VO in healthy older men and women, and the association was strengthened after adjustment for physical activity. Hb and erythrocyte volume were strongly associated with VO but unrelated to physical activity.

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