The purposes of this study were to assess if women 60 to 75 years of age perceived
a series of exercise intensities differently from selected intensities in that series
and to determine if a particular intensity was perceived more reliably. Twenty-four
women (65 ± 3.8 yr) completed a walking VO2max treadmill test. Subjects were either assigned to a variable, randomlly ordered
exercise protocol (Gpl) or to one of three constant exercise protocols (Gps 2 - 4).
Each subject performed relative exencise intensities of 30, 50, and 70 % of peak VO2 for three 5 min work bouts over 3 test days. Differences in RPE (p < 0.05) were found
between each intensity and between the same intensities from both protocols. Women
in Gp1 rated exercise higher than women who exercised at an constant exercise intensity
(p < 0.05). Intraclass correlation coefficients indicated that the exercise intensity
of 50 % of maximum was more reliable regardless of the protocol (Gp1: R = 0.97, Gp3:
r = 0.94). When the RPE-HR correlation coefficients were transformed into a log scale,
neither protocol had a stronger association (p > 0.05) between RPE-HR. lt was concluded
that older women should be given a range of exercise intensities that include the
50 % relative exercise intensity as a perceptual marker in order to reach a reliable
rate of exertion.
Key words
Perceived exertion - older women - exercise testing - reliability exercise intensity
comparison