Introduction: Wearable near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) measurements of muscle oxygen saturation (SmO) demonstrated good test-retest reliability at rest. We hypothesized SmO measured with the Moxy monitor at the vastus lateralis (VL) would demonstrate good reliability across intensities. For relative reliability, SmO will be lower than volume of oxygen consumption (V̇O) and heart rate (HR), higher than concentration of blood lactate accumulation ([BLa]) and rating of perceived exertion (RPE). We aimed to estimate the reliability of SmO and common physiological measures across exercise intensities, as well as to quantify within-participant agreement between sessions.

Methods: Twenty-one trained cyclists completed two trials of an incremental multi-stage cycling test with 5 min constant workload steps starting at 1.0 watt per kg bodyweight (W·kg) and increasing by 0.5 W kg per step, separated by 1 min passive recovery intervals until maximal task tolerance. SmO, HR, V̇O, [BLa], and RPE were recorded for each stage. Continuous measures were averaged over the final 60 s of each stage. Relative reliability at the lowest, median, and highest work stages was quantified as intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Absolute reliability and within-subject agreement were quantified as standard error of the measurement (SEM) and minimum detectable change (MDC).

Results: Comparisons between trials showed no significant differences within each exercise intensity for all outcome variables. ICC for SmO was 0.81-0.90 across exercise intensity. ICC for HR, V̇O, [BLa], and RPE were 0.87-0.92, 0.73-0.97, 0.44-0.74, 0.29-0.70, respectively. SEM (95% CI) for SmO was 5 (3-7), 6 (4-9), and 7 (5-10)%, and MDC was 12%, 16%, and 18%.

Discussion: Our results demonstrate good-to-excellent test-retest reliability for SmO across intensity during an incremental multi-stage cycling test. V̇O and HR had excellent reliability, higher than SmO. [BLa] and RPE had lower reliability than SmO. Muscle oxygen saturation measured by wearable NIRS was found to have similar reliability to V̇O and HR, and higher than [BLa] and RPE across exercise intensity, suggesting that it is appropriate for everyday use as a non-invasive method of monitoring internal load alongside other metrics.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10436610PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2023.1143393DOI Listing

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