Influence of body size on oxygen consumption during bicycling

1987 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 668-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. P. Swain ◽  
J. R. Coast ◽  
P. S. Clifford ◽  
M. C. Milliken ◽  
J. Stray-Gundersen

Energy in bicycling is primarily expended to overcome air resistance, which is proportional to a cyclist's surface area (SA). Thus we hypothesized that large cyclists should have a lower O2 consumption normalized to body weight (VO2/BW) than small cyclists because of the former's lower SA/BW. We measured the VO2/BW of small (BW = 59.4 +/- 4.1 kg) and large (BW = 84.4 +/- 3.2 kg) cyclists while they bicycled on a flat road at 10, 15, and 20 mph. The large cyclists had a 22% lower VO2/BW than the small cyclists at all speeds. However, the SA/BW ratio of the large cyclists was only 11% lower than that of the small cyclists. We then photographically determined the frontal area (FA) of the cyclists in a racing posture, and found that the large cyclists had a 16% lower FA/BW ratio than the small cyclists. We conclude that large cyclists are at a distinct advantage, in terms of VO2/BW, while bicycling on level roads, and this advantage is principally due to their lower FA/BW ratio.

1953 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 475-491 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. ELLENBY

1. The oxygen consumption and surface area of individual diploid and triploid prepupae of Drosophila melanogaster have been measured, the cells of triploid animals being larger. 2. The mean weights for the types examined are different but their ranges overlap almost completely. By covariance analysis it is shown that, after adjustment for difference in body size, there are no differences in the rates of oxygen consumption. It is concluded that, for these animals, cell size has no influence on the rate of oxygen consumption. 3. The relationships between body weight, surface area, and oxygen consumption have been further investigated. It is shown that, despite the greater inaccuracy of the method by which surface area is determined, oxygen consumption can be predicted more accurately from surface area than from body weight. 4. The results are discussed in relation to an earlier investigation of the oxygen consumption of other genotypes (Ellenby, 1945 a, b). Possible technical causes of certain differences between the two series of results in the relationship of oxygen consumption and body weight are explored; it is concluded, however, that they are almost certainly due to differences, not necessarily genetical, between the animals used in the two series.


1971 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 651-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. HUGHES ◽  
R. GAYMER ◽  
MARGARET MOORE ◽  
A. J. WOAKES

1. The O2 consumption and CO2 release of nine giant tortoises Testudo gigantea (weight range 118 g-35·5 kg) were measured at a temperature of about 25·5°C. Four European tortoises Testudo hermanni (weight range 640 g-2·16 kg) were also used. The mean RQ values obtained were 1·01 for T. gigantea and 0·97 for T. hermanni. These values were not influenced by activity or size. 2. The data was analysed by plotting log/log regression lines relating body weight to O2 consumption. Both maximum and minimum metabolic rates recorded for each individual T. gigantea showed a negative correlation with body weight. For active rates the relation was O2 consumption = 140·8W0·97, whereas for inactive animals O2 consumption = 45·47W0·82. 3. The maximum rates were obtained from animals that were observed to be active in the respirometer and the minimum rates from animals that remained quiet throughout. The scope for activity increased with body size, being 82 ml/kg/h for animals of 100 g and 103 ml/kg/h for 100 kg animals. The corresponding ratio between maximum and minimum rates increases from about 2 to 6 for the same weight range. 4. Values for metabolic rate in T. hermanni seem to be rather lower than in T. gigantea. Analysis of the relative proportion of the shell and other organs indicates that the shell forms about 31% of the body weight in adult T. hermanni but only about 18% in T. gigantea of similar size. The shell is not appreciably heavier in adult T. gigantea (about 20%). 5. Data obtained for inactive animals is in good agreement with results of other workers using lizards and snakes. Previous evidence suggesting that chelonians show no reduction in metabolic rate with increasing size is not considered to conflict with data obtained in the present work.


1965 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 1070-1073 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Margaria ◽  
P. Aghemo ◽  
E. Rovelli

A nomogram is described for obtaining the value of maximum oxygen consumption per kilogram of body weight from the heart rate values observed at two submaximal work loads. The exercise consists in stepping up and down a 30- to 40-cm bench at a frequency dictated by a metronome. This procedure can be applied to all classes of subjects; the variability of the data obtained is within ±7% with those directly determined. maximum muscle power; aerobic fitness test for sport Submitted on January 27, 1965


1956 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 134-141
Author(s):  
C. ELLENBY ◽  
D. A. EVANS

1. Previous investigations with Ligia oceanica and prepupae of Drosophila melanogaster (Ellenby, 1951, 1953) have suggested that it may be possible to predict the level of oxygen consumption more precisely from a measurement of surface area (Drosophila) or body length (Ligia) than from body weight, in spite of the greater accuracy of the latter measurement. The point is now examined more closely by applying the technique of multiple regression to the original data. 2. For Ligia, it is shown that the suggestion cannot be upheld, for the level of oxygen consumption can be predicted with greater accuracy from body weight than from a function of body length. 3. On the other hand, for diploid male and female prepupae of Drosophila, it is shown that surface area does, in fact, give a better prediction than body weight. In the case of triploid female prepupae, however, body weight is superior. 4. It is shown that there are no grounds for believing that the measurements of surface area were less accurate in the case of the triploids; for this and other reasons, it is suggested that the difference between diploids and triploids may be due to a fundamental difference between the two sorts of prepupae.


1945 ◽  
Vol 21 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 39-45
Author(s):  
C. ELLENBY

1. A method is described by means of which the surface area of puparia of Drosophila melanogaster may be measured. 2. Measurement of almost 200 puparia showed that the relationship between surface area, per mg., and body weight could best be expressed in the form of the equation S=7.7049-2.1099X, where S=surface area, sq. mm. per mg. wet weight, for prepupae of mean wet weight X mg. As the standard error of estimate, ±0.117, is equal to only 2.2% of the mean surface area per mg., the surface area can be accurately estimated from the wet weight. 3. The prepupal oxygen consumption, per mg. wet weight, is shown to decrease steadily with increasing body weight; with an increase in mean wet weight from 0.847 to 1.700 mg., the oxygen consumption, per mg., decreases by about 50%. 4. Utilizing the above regression equation, the surface area of prepupae of known oxygen consumption was estimated and thus the oxygen consumption per sq. mm. of body surface. These values show no significant variation with increasing body weight, so that it can be concluded that the oxygen consumption of prepupae of D. melanogaster is proportional to the surface area.


1995 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danette M. Rogers ◽  
Kenneth R. Turley ◽  
Kathleen I. Kujawa ◽  
Kevin M. Harper ◽  
Jack H. Wilmore

This study was designed to examine the relationship between oxygen consumption and both body surface area and body mass in children to determine what allometric scaling factors from these variables provide appropriate means of expressing data for this population. These scaling factors were then compared to exponents based on theoretical and animal models to determine if the same relationships were present. Forty-two children (21 boys and 21 girls) 7 to 9 years of age participated in maximal and submaximal treadmill testing. The submaximal V̇O2 to body size relationship proved to be a more appropriate factor to use when scaling V̇O2 than the relationship seen between body size and V̇O2max. Therefore, in this population of children, V̇O2 relative to body surface area or body mass to the power 0.67, demonstrated submaximally, provided a more appropriate means of data expression both statistically and physiologically than the traditional expression of V̇O2 relative to body mass (ml·kg−1·min−1).


1951 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 492-507 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. ELLENBY

1. Male Ligia oceanica were used in an investigation of the relationship of body size to rate of oxygen consumption and pleopod beat. 2. Animals varied in weight from 0.04 to 1.03 g. and from 0.95 to 3.1 cm. in length. 3. Body shape does not change significantly over the size range, for length and breadth both increase at the same rate, and pleopod dimensions bear a constant relation to body length. 4. Specific gravity also is constant, for the relation of body weight to the cube of body length shows no trend with increasing size. 5. Oxygen consumption per gram decreases with increasing size and is proportional to the -0.274 Power of body weight. Total oxygen consumption is therefore proportional to the 0.726 power of body weight; but this value does not differ significantly from two-thirds. 6. As shape is constant, surface area is proportional to the square of a linear dimension. It is shown that oxygen consumption per unit of length2 is constant over the size range. Although body length was measured far less accurately than body weight it is shown that it assesses ‘body size’ more accurately. 7. Rate of pleopod beat was measured at 15 and 25°C.; it decreases with the size of the animal. At 15°C. time per beat varies as the 0.66 power of body length, and at 25°C. as the 0.59 power; neither of these values differs significantly from 0.5. Despite the fact that pleopod movement is heavily damped, the rate therefore varies like that of a pendulum. 9. The workof Fox (1936-9) and Fox et al. (1937a)on the rate of oxygen consumption of animals from cold and warmer seas and from different habitats is considered. It is suggested that many of their comparisons are invalidated by differences in body size of the animals concerned, and that, in relation to environment, no basis, theoretical or experimental, has been established for a distinction between ‘nonlocomotory’ and ‘activity’ metabolism.


2001 ◽  
Vol 281 (3) ◽  
pp. E586-E591 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward H. Livingston ◽  
Scott Lee

None of the equations frequently used to predict body surface area (BSA) has been validated for obese patients. We applied the principles of body size scaling to derive an improved equation predicting BSA solely from a patient's weight. Forty-five patients weighing from 51.3 to 248.6 kg had their height and weight measured on a calibrated scale and their BSA calculated by a geometric method. Data were combined with a large series of published BSA estimates. BSA prediction with the commonly used Du Bois equation underestimated BSA in obese patients by as much as 20%. The equation we derived to relate BSA to body weight was a power function: BSA (m2) = 0.1173 × Wt (kg)0.6466. Below 10 kg, this equation deviated significantly from the BSA vs. body weight curve, necessitating a different set of coefficients: BSA (m2) = 0.1037 × Wt (kg)0.6724. Covariance of height and weight for patients weighing <80 kg reduced the Du Bois BSA-predicting equation to a power function, explaining why it provides good BSA predictions for normal-size patients but fails with obesity.


1966 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 869-908 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Paloheimo ◽  
L. M. Dickie

In an earlier paper we described the growth of fishes, ΔW/Δt, in relation to the experimentally measurable variables, body weight (W), food intake (R), and total metabolism (T). Here we review experimental evidence of the nature of the relation between T and W, and its dependence on R and temperature. Making use of the basic energy equation, pR = T + ΔW/Δt, where p is the term for correction from injested to utilizable energy, we calculate T as the difference between the energy equivalents of R and ΔW/Δt, for comparison with results of oxygen consumption studies. Application to a number of published experimental results suggests that with constant food availability, this index of total metabolism, T, derived from feeding experiments, shows the same rate of change with body weight, W, as has been found by oxygen consumption studies under standard conditions. That is, the two sources of data provide estimates of a common γ in the relation[Formula: see text]where α and γ are the fitted parameters for the curve.When fish are fed on a "maintenance" diet, the value of α calculated from the food-growth difference (the growth change is rarely nil in a given experimental observation period), appears to correspond with that characterizing the "routine" metabolic level in oxygen consumption studies. Higher α levels result from higher levels of food availability, and at ad libitum feeding α appears to approach the levels known in oxygen consumption studies as "active" metabolic levels. Temperature effects in the experiments were estimated from multiple regression analyses and showed an elevation of α with increasing temperature. The long-term effect of temperature on α was comparable with that predicted by the Krogh correction at ad libitum feeding, but was significantly lower when food was limited, as at "maintenance" feeding.From a survey of effects of different designs of feeding experiments on these metabolic parameters, it appeared that apparently aberrant values of the weight exponent γ may instead be mistaken interpretations of changes in the level of metabolism α. That is, within the limiting conditions of standard or active metabolism, changes in temperature during experiments or manipulations of the availability of food by the experimenter, sometimes unintentionally, elicit adaptative responses in the level of metabolism, α. These show up in the results as effects on γ when the changes in conditions are gradual, hence confounded with body-size changes during growth.The ability to make distinctions between effects of various factors on these two metabolic parameters appears to depend upon a distinction between experiments conducted with a view to learning what fish do under particular circumstances, and experiments designed to explore what fish are capable of doing. The former type reveal a remarkable conservatism in the basic relation between metabolism and body size, γ. Results from the latter reflect possibilities of metabolic adaptation to environmental circumstances. The apparent predictability of the response of the total metabolism to various conditions of food energy supply and dissipation suggests that the remainder of the energy system, represented by the growth, may be similarly predictable. If this is true outside the laboratory, measurements of the metabolic parameters, α and γ, already familiar in physiological and behavioural research, could be directly used as indices of the (relative) positions of various sizes and species of fish in natural production systems.


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