The Association Between Cardiorespiratory Fitness Directly Assessed by the Cardiopulmonary Stress Test and the Perception of Stress
Gianluigi Oggionni, Marcello Rizzi, Giuseppina Bernardelli, Mara Malacarne, Massimo Pagani, Daniela Lucini

TL;DR
This study finds that higher cardiorespiratory fitness is linked to lower perceived stress, fatigue, and somatic symptoms, highlighting the role of physical activity in stress management.
Contribution
The paper directly measures cardiorespiratory fitness via CPX and links it to self-reported stress and physical activity levels.
Findings
VO2max was negatively correlated with stress, fatigue, and somatic symptoms.
Subjects not meeting PA goals reported higher stress and symptoms.
Physical activity levels were positively correlated with cardiorespiratory fitness.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) represents a strong and consistent predictor of mortality among adults. It is ideally expressed as the maximum or peak rate of oxygen consumption per kilogram of body mass (VO2max) determined by the cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPX). Variance in CRF is mainly attributable to genetics and physical training; nevertheless, strong behavioral and socioeconomic confounders need to be considered. Among those, psychosocial stress may play an important role. Some papers show an association between low CRF and chronic stress conditions; nevertheless, CRF is generally estimated by indirect assessment and not directly measured by CPX. Methods: CRF was directly assessed by performing a CPX in 145 consecutive subjects (56 male, 89 female) (age 19–65 years) who attended our Exercise Medicine unit for health check-ups. Weekly total volume of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiovascular and exercise physiology · Physical Activity and Health · Sports Performance and Training
