Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
Heart Disease  (Expert Forum)
 | 
Re: metabolic equivalent unit (mets) formula
This forum is for questions and support regarding heart issues such as: Angina, Angioplasty, Arrhythmia, Bypass Surgery, Cardiomyopathy, Coronary Artery Disease, Defibrillator, Heart Attack, Heart Disease, High Blood Pressure, Mitral Valve Prolapse, Pacemaker, PAD, Stenosis, Stress Tests.

Re: metabolic equivalent unit (mets) formula

by George__0__0, Jan 01, 1995 12:00AM
Posted By George on August 07, 1999 at 20:01:26PHi,                                                       In july I had a stress test on bruce protocol treadmill.Doctor gave me all test results except for the mets.These are the results of the treadmill bruce stress test.                                                     Event     Time     Speed     Grade     HR     BP          rest                                   99     144/80      stage 1   3:00     1.7       10        121    160/80      stage 2   3:00     2.5       12        136                stage 3   3:00     3.4       14        154    182/82      stage 4   3:00     4.2       16        168                stage 5   2:34     5.0       18        185                stop ex. 14.34                                            Interpretation: The patient exercised for 14.34 minutes on a standard Bruce protocol and stopped because of fatigue.The HR rose to 185 beats and the BP rose to 182/82.He denied any chest discomfort.There were no significant ST segment change.Summary 1.Negative exercise EKG 2.Excellent exercise capacity.                        According to the above stress test results, how many METS did I achieve? What is the formula for METS in stress testing?Thank you.George                                  By away I am 35 years old male weigh 166 pounds and 5'11 feet tall.PPHR WIDTH=75% SIZE=4 COLOR=#000090
Member Comments

by CF-CARDIO-MD-JMF, Jan 01, 1995 12:00AM
Posted By CCF CARDIO MD JMF on August 08, 1999 at 14:57:36PbrDear Gerge,pMETS or metabolic equivalents are estimated by the work load estimated at 14 minutes of a  standard bruce protocol in your case.  p1 MET is equivalent to 3.5 ml of oxygen per kilogram body weight per minute.  14 minutes into a bruce protocol, you are walking 5.0 mph on an 18 % grade this is the equivalent of 16 - 17 mets.  or about 60 ml/kg/min of oxygen consumption.  In general, we do not ask people to exercise at more than 5 mets for cardiovascular benefit.pSound like you're in great shape!  Keep up the good work!ppI hope this has been usef

by George__0__0, Jan 01, 1995 12:00AM
Posted By George on August 09, 1999 at 17:05:54

A four months ago (April) I had another Bruce protocol stress test. These are the results.AGE 35; WEIGHT 74.5 KG; EX.MODE TM; BRUCE PROTOCOL; STAGE 6; 15:08 MINUTES; PEAK EXERCISE LOAD 5.5 MPH/20 %; PEAK H.R.: PREDICTED/ACHIEVED/%PRED. 185/186/100; REST BP 110/80; PEAK EX.BP 176/80; TEST TERMINATED BECAUSE OF FATIGUE. IMPRESSIONS: NO ST's.NORMAL BP RESPONSE.GOOD WORK CAPACITY. NORMAL GXT.                                                                                                             According to the above test results how many mets did I achieve? And if a mets are estimated and not calculated, how are they estimated?Thank you. George










Follow Ups:


Re: metabolic equivalent unit (mets) formula CCF CARDIO MD JMF 8/11/1999
(0)






Related discussions
Continue discussion
RSS Expert Activity
Snoring As Your Internal Smoke Alar...
Nov 22 by Steven Y Park, MD
Raw Pet Food Diets: Common Sense
Nov 21 by Arnold L Goldman, D.V.M.
Long-term Nasal Saline Irrigation: ...
Nov 20 by Steven Y Park, MD