Cardiopulmonary exercise test interpretation using age-matched controls to evaluate exertional dyspnea

Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this population. This study evaluated interpretation of maximal CPET in a young adult cohort with known pulmonary disorders using published reference values...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inMilitary medicine Vol. 174; no. 11; pp. 1177 - 1182
Main Authors Sill, Joshua M, Morris, Michael J, Johnson, James E, Allan, Patrick F, Grbach, Vincent X
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 01.11.2009
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this population. This study evaluated interpretation of maximal CPET in a young adult cohort with known pulmonary disorders using published reference values compared to age-matched normal controls. A control population of 69 healthy military volunteers with normal chest radiographs, pulmonary function testing, and bronchoprovocation testing were compared to 105 patients with exertional dyspnea. Both groups underwent a standardized evaluation including CPET on a graded exercise treadmill to maximal exercise with expired gas analysis. Measurements from CPET in the dyspnea group were interpreted using published reference values compared to control population results (mean +/- 1.65 x SD). Statistical comparison of predicted normals (reference vs. control) of maximal oxygen consumption (> 83% vs. 82%), ventilatory anaerobic threshold (> 40% vs. 53%), respiratory rate (< 60 vs. 56 breaths/min), tidal volume to inspiratory capacity (< 80% vs. 111%), ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide production (< 40 vs. 38), and maximal voluntary ventilation minus minute ventilation (> 11 vs. -1 L/min) was performed. The overall specificity for tidal volume to inspiratory capacity improved using age-matched controls but sensitivity was decreased. Other parameters were not significantly different. The use of age-matched controls for CPET results in an increase in specificity and decrease in sensitivity for respiratory limitations to exercise, when compared to reference values. The study findings suggest that CPET may be insensitive in detecting mild disease in young healthy adults.
AbstractList Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this population. This study evaluated interpretation of maximal CPET in a young adult cohort with known pulmonary disorders using published reference values compared to age-matched normal controls. A control population of 69 healthy military volunteers with normal chest radiographs, pulmonary function testing, and bronchoprovocation testing were compared to 105 patients with exertional dyspnea. Both groups underwent a standardized evaluation including CPET on a graded exercise treadmill to maximal exercise with expired gas analysis. Measurements from CPET in the dyspnea group were interpreted using published reference values compared to control population results (mean +/- 1.65 x SD). Statistical comparison of predicted normals (reference vs. control) of maximal oxygen consumption (> 83% vs. 82%), ventilatory anaerobic threshold (> 40% vs. 53%), respiratory rate (< 60 vs. 56 breaths/min), tidal volume to inspiratory capacity (< 80% vs. 111%), ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide production (< 40 vs. 38), and maximal voluntary ventilation minus minute ventilation (> 11 vs. -1 L/min) was performed. The overall specificity for tidal volume to inspiratory capacity improved using age-matched controls but sensitivity was decreased. Other parameters were not significantly different. The use of age-matched controls for CPET results in an increase in specificity and decrease in sensitivity for respiratory limitations to exercise, when compared to reference values. The study findings suggest that CPET may be insensitive in detecting mild disease in young healthy adults.
Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this population. This study evaluated interpretation of maximal CPET in a young adult cohort with known pulmonary disorders using published reference values compared to age-matched normal controls. A control population of 69 healthy military volunteers with normal chest radiographs, pulmonary function testing, and bronchoprovocation testing were compared to 105 patients with exertional dyspnea. Both groups underwent a standardized evaluation including CPET on a graded exercise treadmill to maximal exercise with expired gas analysis. Measurements from CPET in the dyspnea group were interpreted using published reference values compared to control population results (mean +/- 1.65 x SD). Statistical comparison of predicted normals (reference vs. control) of maximal oxygen consumption (> 83% vs. 82%), ventilatory anaerobic threshold (> 40% vs. 53%), respiratory rate (< 60 vs. 56 breaths/min), tidal volume to inspiratory capacity (< 80% vs. 111%), ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide production (< 40 vs. 38), and maximal voluntary ventilation minus minute ventilation (> 11 vs. -1 L/min) was performed. The overall specificity for tidal volume to inspiratory capacity improved using age-matched controls but sensitivity was decreased. Other parameters were not significantly different. The use of age-matched controls for CPET results in an increase in specificity and decrease in sensitivity for respiratory limitations to exercise, when compared to reference values. The study findings suggest that CPET may be insensitive in detecting mild disease in young healthy adults.
ABSTRACT Background: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this population. This study evaluated interpretation of maximal CPET in a young adult cohort with known pulmonary disorders using published reference values compared to age-matched normal controls. Methods: A control population of 69 healthy military volunteers with normal chest radiographs, pulmonary function testing, and bronchoprovocation testing were compared to 105 patients with exertional dyspnea. Both groups underwent a standardized evaluation including CPET on a graded exercise treadmill to maximal exercise with expired gas analysis. Results: Measurements from CPET in the dyspnea group were interpreted using published reference values compared to control population results (mean plus or minus 1.65 X SD). Statistical comparison of predicted normals (reference vs. control) of maximal oxygen consumption (>83% vs. 82%), ventilatory anaerobic threshold (>40% vs. 53%), respiratory rate (<60 vs. 56 breaths/min), tidal volume to inspiratory capacity (<80% vs. 111%), ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide production (<40 vs. 38), and maximal voluntary ventilation minus minute ventilation (>11 vs. -1 L/min) was performed. The overall specificity for tidal volume to inspiratory capacity improved using age-matched controls but sensitivity was decreased. Other parameters were not significantly different. Conclusions: The use of age-matched controls for CPET results in an increase in specificity and decrease in sensitivity for respiratory limitations to exercise, when compared to reference values. The study findings suggest that CPET may be insensitive in detecting mild disease in young healthy adults.
BACKGROUNDCardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this population. This study evaluated interpretation of maximal CPET in a young adult cohort with known pulmonary disorders using published reference values compared to age-matched normal controls.METHODSA control population of 69 healthy military volunteers with normal chest radiographs, pulmonary function testing, and bronchoprovocation testing were compared to 105 patients with exertional dyspnea. Both groups underwent a standardized evaluation including CPET on a graded exercise treadmill to maximal exercise with expired gas analysis.RESULTSMeasurements from CPET in the dyspnea group were interpreted using published reference values compared to control population results (mean +/- 1.65 x SD). Statistical comparison of predicted normals (reference vs. control) of maximal oxygen consumption (> 83% vs. 82%), ventilatory anaerobic threshold (> 40% vs. 53%), respiratory rate (< 60 vs. 56 breaths/min), tidal volume to inspiratory capacity (< 80% vs. 111%), ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide production (< 40 vs. 38), and maximal voluntary ventilation minus minute ventilation (> 11 vs. -1 L/min) was performed. The overall specificity for tidal volume to inspiratory capacity improved using age-matched controls but sensitivity was decreased. Other parameters were not significantly different.CONCLUSIONSThe use of age-matched controls for CPET results in an increase in specificity and decrease in sensitivity for respiratory limitations to exercise, when compared to reference values. The study findings suggest that CPET may be insensitive in detecting mild disease in young healthy adults.
Author Morris, Michael J
Johnson, James E
Sill, Joshua M
Grbach, Vincent X
Allan, Patrick F
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Joshua M
  surname: Sill
  fullname: Sill, Joshua M
  organization: Pulmonary Disease/Critical Care Medicine Service, Department of Medicine, Brooke Army Medical Center, 3851 Roger Brooke Road, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234-6200, USA
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Michael J
  surname: Morris
  fullname: Morris, Michael J
– sequence: 3
  givenname: James E
  surname: Johnson
  fullname: Johnson, James E
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Patrick F
  surname: Allan
  fullname: Allan, Patrick F
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Vincent X
  surname: Grbach
  fullname: Grbach, Vincent X
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19960826$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNqFkb1vFDEQxS0URC6BngqtaFKZ-GvtdYnuEoh0EQ1IdJbXng0b7dqL7UXkv4-POwmJhmqm-M3TvPcu0FmIARB6S8kHxUh7fX-3v7_Z4R0mLSacdC_QhmpOsKT8-xnaEMIkFkS15-gi50dCqNAdfYXOqdaSdExu0LC1yY9xWac5BpueGvgNyY0ZmgK5NGMokJYExZYxhmbNY3ho7APg2Rb3A3zjYigpTrkpsYFfdlptgT8aB95OjX_KSwD7Gr0c7JThzWleom-3N1-3n_H-y6e77cc9dlzrgoWsLzurOsv1wDTtqdP9IDrtnVdWt4xZ6vkwKC1Up5iwvuNdD9UX80z2nF-iq6PukuLPtTow85gdTJMNENdslGil4EKy_5OcyxqfUJV8_w_5GNdUzWXDqCKSSH2AyBFyKeacYDBLGucaqKHEHLoyx67MztT90FU9eXfSXfsZ_N-DUzn8GbxlkrY
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1155_2013_940170
crossref_primary_10_14814_phy2_15934
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_rmed_2016_07_014
crossref_primary_10_1056_NEJMc1109866
crossref_primary_10_1177_1753465813481022
crossref_primary_10_1145_2508037_2508051
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Copyright Association of Military Surgeons of the United States Nov 2009
Copyright_xml – notice: Copyright Association of Military Surgeons of the United States Nov 2009
DBID CGR
CUY
CVF
ECM
EIF
NPM
AAYXX
CITATION
3V.
4T-
7RV
7X7
7XB
88E
88F
88G
88I
8AF
8AO
8C1
8FI
8FJ
8FK
ABUWG
AFKRA
AZQEC
BEC
BENPR
CCPQU
DWQXO
FYUFA
GHDGH
GNUQQ
HCIFZ
K9-
K9.
KB0
M0R
M0S
M1P
M1Q
M2M
M2P
NAPCQ
PQEST
PQQKQ
PQUKI
PRINS
PSYQQ
Q9U
S0X
7X8
7TS
DOI 10.7205/MILMED-D-05-0308
DatabaseName Medline
MEDLINE
MEDLINE (Ovid)
MEDLINE
MEDLINE
PubMed
CrossRef
ProQuest Central (Corporate)
Docstoc
Nursing & Allied Health Database
Health & Medical Collection
ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)
Medical Database (Alumni Edition)
Military Database (Alumni Edition)
Psychology Database (Alumni)
Science Database (Alumni Edition)
STEM Database
ProQuest Pharma Collection
Public Health Database (Proquest)
Hospital Premium Collection
Hospital Premium Collection (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
ProQuest Central
ProQuest Central Essentials
eLibrary
AUTh Library subscriptions: ProQuest Central
ProQuest One Community College
ProQuest Central Korea
Health Research Premium Collection
Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni)
ProQuest Central Student
SciTech Premium Collection
Consumer Health Database
ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni)
Nursing & Allied Health Database (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Consumer Health Database
Health & Medical Collection (Alumni Edition)
PML(ProQuest Medical Library)
Military Database
Psychology Database
ProQuest Science Journals
Nursing & Allied Health Premium
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
ProQuest Central China
ProQuest One Psychology
ProQuest Central Basic
SIRS Editorial
MEDLINE - Academic
Physical Education Index
DatabaseTitle MEDLINE
Medline Complete
MEDLINE with Full Text
PubMed
MEDLINE (Ovid)
CrossRef
ProQuest One Psychology
ProQuest Central Student
ProQuest Central Essentials
SIRS Editorial
elibrary
ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni)
ProQuest AP Science
ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)
SciTech Premium Collection
ProQuest One Community College
ProQuest Military Collection
ProQuest Pharma Collection
ProQuest Family Health (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central China
ProQuest Central
Health Research Premium Collection
Health and Medicine Complete (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central Korea
ProQuest Medical Library (Alumni)
ProQuest Public Health
ProQuest Science Journals (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central Basic
ProQuest Science Journals
ProQuest Family Health
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition
ProQuest Nursing & Allied Health Source
ProQuest Hospital Collection
Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni)
ProQuest Psychology Journals (Alumni)
ProQuest Military Collection (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Hospital Collection (Alumni)
Nursing & Allied Health Premium
ProQuest Health & Medical Complete
ProQuest Medical Library
ProQuest Psychology Journals
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
Docstoc
ProQuest Nursing & Allied Health Source (Alumni)
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
MEDLINE - Academic
Physical Education Index
DatabaseTitleList MEDLINE
ProQuest One Psychology
Physical Education Index
MEDLINE - Academic
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: NPM
  name: PubMed
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed
  sourceTypes: Index Database
– sequence: 2
  dbid: EIF
  name: MEDLINE
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://www.webofscience.com/wos/medline/basic-search
  sourceTypes: Index Database
– sequence: 3
  dbid: BENPR
  name: AUTh Library subscriptions: ProQuest Central
  url: https://www.proquest.com/central
  sourceTypes: Aggregation Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Medicine
EISSN 1930-613X
EndPage 1182
ExternalDocumentID 1903086981
10_7205_MILMED_D_05_0308
19960826
Genre Journal Article
GroupedDBID ---
.GJ
.HR
04C
0R~
123
1CY
29M
36B
3V.
48X
53G
5RE
5WD
7RV
7X7
88E
88I
8AF
8AO
8C1
8FI
8FJ
8R4
8R5
96U
AABZA
AACZT
AAJQQ
AAMZS
AAPGJ
AAPQZ
AAPXW
AARHZ
AAUAY
AAUOS
AAUQX
AAVAP
AAWDT
AAWTL
ABDBF
ABIVO
ABJNI
ABKEB
ABNHQ
ABPQP
ABPTD
ABQNK
ABUWG
ABWST
ABXVK
ABXVV
ACBNA
ACFRR
ACGFS
ACGOD
ACIHN
ACUTJ
ACYHN
ACZBC
ADBBV
ADBKU
ADGZP
ADIPN
ADLOL
ADQBN
ADQIT
ADRTK
ADVEK
AEAQA
AEJER
AENEX
AETBJ
AFAZI
AFFZL
AFKRA
AFOFC
AFYAG
AGINJ
AGKRT
AGMDO
AGQXC
AGUTN
AHMBA
AJEEA
ALIPV
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
APJGH
AQDSO
ATGXG
AVNTJ
AZQEC
B0M
BAYMD
BCR
BCRHZ
BCU
BEC
BENPR
BEYMZ
BHZBG
BKEYQ
BKNYI
BLC
BMSDO
BOXDG
BPHCQ
BTRTY
BVXVI
C45
CCPQU
CDBKE
CGR
CUY
CVF
DAKXR
DWQXO
EAP
EBC
EBD
EBS
ECIRT
ECM
EHN
EIF
EIHBH
EIHJH
EIS
EJD
EMB
EMI
EMK
EMOBN
ENC
ENERS
EPL
EPT
ESX
ETYVG
EX3
EYXSX
F5P
F8P
FECEO
FLUFQ
FOEOM
FOTVD
FQBLK
FYUFA
GAUVT
GJXCC
GNUQQ
H13
HCIFZ
HMCUK
K9-
KBUDW
KOP
KSI
KSN
L7B
LOXHT
M0R
M1P
M1Q
M2M
M2P
M2Q
MBLQV
MHKGH
MJWOD
MXSPP
NAPCQ
NJ-
NOMLY
NOYVH
NPM
NVLIB
O9-
OAUYM
OCZFY
ODMLO
OHT
OJZSN
OK1
OPAEJ
OVD
OWPYF
OXVUA
PAFKI
PCD
PEA
PLIXB
PQQKQ
PROAC
PSQYO
PSYQQ
Q-A
Q2X
Q~Q
ROX
RUSNO
RWL
RXW
S0X
SJFOW
SJN
SV3
TAE
TEORI
THA
TMA
TUS
U5U
UAP
UKHRP
UNMZH
WH7
WOW
YADRA
YAJVU
YAYTL
YCJ
YKOAZ
YXANX
ZGI
ZXP
~8M
~SN
AASNB
AAYXX
CITATION
4T-
7XB
8FK
K9.
PQEST
PQUKI
PRINS
Q9U
7X8
7TS
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c399t-46002ca78a39f291b1c9bf489dcd7a9522a1d3ff79478724ad838be0142d26b33
IEDL.DBID BENPR
ISSN 0026-4075
IngestDate Fri Oct 25 04:27:18 EDT 2024
Fri Oct 25 09:43:45 EDT 2024
Thu Oct 10 17:22:14 EDT 2024
Thu Sep 12 17:03:10 EDT 2024
Wed Oct 16 00:48:23 EDT 2024
IsDoiOpenAccess false
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 11
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c399t-46002ca78a39f291b1c9bf489dcd7a9522a1d3ff79478724ad838be0142d26b33
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ObjectType-Article-2
ObjectType-Feature-1
OpenAccessLink https://academic.oup.com/milmed/article-pdf/174/11/1177/21584015/milmed-d-05-0308.pdf
PMID 19960826
PQID 217060697
PQPubID 7561
PageCount 6
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_745643462
proquest_miscellaneous_733602647
proquest_journals_217060697
crossref_primary_10_7205_MILMED_D_05_0308
pubmed_primary_19960826
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2009-11-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2009-11-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 11
  year: 2009
  text: 2009-11-01
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2000
PublicationPlace England
PublicationPlace_xml – name: England
– name: Oxford
PublicationTitle Military medicine
PublicationTitleAlternate Mil Med
PublicationYear 2009
Publisher Oxford University Press
Publisher_xml – name: Oxford University Press
SSID ssj0014981
Score 1.9341685
Snippet Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this...
BACKGROUNDCardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values exist in this...
ABSTRACT Background: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is one method to diagnose unexplained dyspnea in young adults, yet few normal reference values...
SourceID proquest
crossref
pubmed
SourceType Aggregation Database
Index Database
StartPage 1177
SubjectTerms Adult
Anaerobic threshold
Body fat
Case-Control Studies
Chi-Square Distribution
Dyspnea
Dyspnea - diagnosis
Dyspnea - physiopathology
Exercise
Exercise Test
Exercise Tolerance
Female
Humans
Lung diseases
Male
Military Personnel
Reference Values
Regression Analysis
Respiratory Function Tests
Young adults
Title Cardiopulmonary exercise test interpretation using age-matched controls to evaluate exertional dyspnea
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19960826
https://www.proquest.com/docview/217060697
https://search.proquest.com/docview/733602647
https://search.proquest.com/docview/745643462
Volume 174
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV07b9swED40DlB0KfpIGjdtwCFLByI2KZHiVKS2grSIgiJIAG8CX8oSyG5kD_n3PT7stkOzCAIkUMQd73jH79MdwOlkYqRVXKAhOUsLziRVzjnqK-8xgRZO6JAoNtfi8q74sSgXmZszZFrl1idGR-2WNpyRn7FY50Uo-XX1i4amUQFczR009mCfYaLARrD_rb7-ebODEQpVpZZ5TGCiJMuEU0o2Kc-a71dNPafzSF7jobvk3_vSf4LNuOlcvIHXOVok50m9b-GF79_Byybj4e-hm0U66WrzgPPTj0-kzh2UyC0OS_5lFJJIDyDn9542OijLkVkiqg9kvSR1qvvt4xjphJDMn4ZV7_UB3F3Ut7NLmjsnUIsBx5oWAW2zWlaaq46pqZlaZbqiUs46qRXGXHrqeNehMaLBskK7ilfGo8CYY8Jwfgijftn7IyCuRHUqZ6zowt5Vmq5jzEqHfgmdnZmM4ctWbu0qFchoMbEIMm6TjNt5i_dBxmM43gq2zaYytDvFjoHsnuIaD8CF7v1yM7ShZCOqsHjulVAWhxeCjeFD0tif2YQCNJhFfXz268fwKgJF8TfDTzBaP278Z4w31uYE9uRC4rWaTU_yCvsNst7V6Q
link.rule.ids 315,783,787,12070,12237,21402,27938,27939,31733,31734,33280,33281,33758,33759,43324,43593,43819,74081,74350,74638
linkProvider ProQuest
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV07b9swED40KZB0KdqkDzdtwyFLBiI2KZHiVAS2A6e1MjmAN4IvdQlkN7KH_PseSdlth2YTIIEi7njHO97H7wAuhkMrneICDck7WnAmqfLe01CFgAm08MLERLG-E7P74vuyXPbYnK6HVe58YnLUfuXiGfkVSzwvQslv6180No2KxdW-g8YBvIw0XJE6Xy73-RbG_lVumMcEpkmyzFVKyYblVX07r6cTOknQNR57S_69K_0n1Exbzs0beN3HiuQ6K_ctvAjtCRzVfTX8FJpxApOutw84O_P4RKZ9_ySywGHJv3hCksAB5PpnoLWJqvJknGHqHdmsyDSzfoc0Rj4fJJOnbt0G8w7ub6aL8Yz2fROow3BjQ4tYa3NGVoarhqmRHTllm6JS3nlpFEZcZuR506ApormywviKVzagwJhnwnL-Hg7bVRs-AvElKlN560QTd67SNg1jTnr0Sujq7HAAlzu56XWmx9CYVkQZ6yxjPdH4HGU8gLOdYHVvKJ3eq3UAZP8WV3gsW5g2rLadjoSNqMLiuU8iKQ4vBBvAh6yxP7OJ9DOYQ3169u_ncDxb1HM9v737cQavUskoXTj8DIebx234gpHHxn5N6-s3PUfVwA
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV07b9swECbaFAi6BE2fTtqUQ5cOhG1SIsWpCCwbSRsFHRLAG8Fnl0J2InvIv8_xYbcdmk2ABIq498c73iH0ZTIxwkrGQZGcJRWjgkjnHPGN9wCgueM6AsXuml_cVt-X9bK0FBpKWeXOJiZD7VY2npGPaerzwqUYh1IV8bNdfFvfkThAKiZayzSN5-iFqMDPgWiL5R57AQ5o8vA8ygEyiTpnLAWd1OPu8qqbt6RNZWwszpn820P9J-xM7mfxCh2VuBGfZ0Yfo2e-f40Ou5IZf4PCLBWWrre_YXf6_gHPyywlfAPL4n9rC3EqFMDnvzzpdGSbw7Ncsj7gzQrPcwdwn9bIZ4W4fRjWvddv0e1ifjO7IGWGArEQemxIFfNuVotGMxmonJqplSZUjXTWCS0h-tJTx0IAtQTVpZV2DWuMB4JRR7lh7B066Fe9_4Cwq4Gx0hnLQ_RitQmBUiscWCgwe2YyQl93dFPr3CpDAcSINFaZxqpV8BxpPEKnO8KqojSD2rN4hPD-LUh7TGHo3q-2g4rNG4GF1VOfxAY5rOJ0hN5njv3ZTWxFA3jq5Mm_f0aHIFrq6vL6xyl6mbJH6e7hR3Swud_6TxCEbMxZEq9HM2fZ9Q
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Cardiopulmonary+Exercise+Test+Interpretation+Using+Age-Matched+Controls+to+Evaluate+Exertional+Dyspnea&rft.jtitle=Military+medicine&rft.au=Sill%2C+Joshua+M&rft.au=Morris%2C+Michael+J&rft.au=Johnson%2C+James+E&rft.au=Allan%2C+Patrick+F&rft.date=2009-11-01&rft.pub=Oxford+University+Press&rft.issn=0026-4075&rft.eissn=1930-613X&rft.volume=174&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=1177&rft_id=info:doi/10.7205%2FMILMED-D-05-0308&rft.externalDBID=HAS_PDF_LINK&rft.externalDocID=1903086981
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0026-4075&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0026-4075&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0026-4075&client=summon