Adherence to heart rate-based intensity parameters predicts cardiovascular response to 12-weeks of aerobic cycling training in sedentary older adults
Tom S. Novak, Caroline Quan, Keith McGregor, Kevin Mammino, Medina Bello, Joe R. Nocera

TL;DR
Sticking to heart rate targets during cycling workouts better predicts improved cardiovascular fitness in older adults than just attending sessions.
Contribution
This study shows that adherence to prescribed heart rate intensity, not attendance, predicts cardiovascular gains in older adults.
Findings
Cycling training improved VO2max by ∼20% over 12 weeks.
Intensity adherence predicted VO2max gains better than attendance.
Polynomial adherence trends explained 42% of VO2 variance.
Abstract
Exercise improves cardiovascular health in older adults, yet variability in responsiveness remains. This study tested if prescribed exercise intensity adherence predicts individual differences in cardiovascular fitness gains following an intervention. From 2017 to 2022, nineteen sedentary older adults (69.78 ± 6.47 years) completed a 12-week aerobic cycling program in the Exercise Research Laboratory at the Atlanta VA Hospital. Participants trained 3× weekly, progressing from 20 to 45 min per session. Target intensity, expressed as percent heart rate reserve (HRR), increased from 50% to 80%. Cardiovascular fitness (V˙O2max) was estimated pre- and post-intervention using the YMCA submaximal test. Attendance reflected the proportion of completed sessions. Intensity-based adherence was derived from the ratio of median HR to prescribed HR across sessions, modeled over time, and expressed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology · Cardiovascular Effects of Exercise
