Your fitness age

The most interesting result of the HUNT studies is their method to determine the fitness age. That works like this. For the entire population, the following relationships have been determined between the VO2 max and the age:

Men: VO2 max = 63.6-0.393age*

Women: VO2 max = 51.2-0.328age*

These relationships are also shown in the figure below.

Now, if you know your actual VO2 max, you can easily determine your fitness age by determining from the graph at which age your VO2 max is equal to that of the average population. For authors Hans and Ron, the fitness age thus becomes 20 and 40 years, a nice result for men aged 66 and 62!

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185 bpm, vo2max between 58-62 ml/kg/min according to the polar fitness test

you can use the polar beat app, under upgrades is a fitness test which can measure your vo2max

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https://www.youtube.com/@LanceHitchings noticed a huge increase in max_HR (well above what would be predicted by his age) after stem cell infusions. He had to manually change his age on the app because the app would auto-adjust his max_HR by his age, but this auto-adjusting is wrong.

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Although there is a correlation between age and max heart rate the spread is huge, maybe he didn’t go deep enough before (to reaching your max heart rate or come close to it you need to be very fresh and do a huge effort and continue when you already really felt like dying a minute earlier)

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Amongst elite endurance athletes, who have historically the best VO2MAX values in the world, heart rate max is all over the place.

When training/exercising, your heart will adapt to do the work. It takes months and months of training to achieve that type of adaptation. I’ve never put too much emphasis or care into max heart rate. I think a more important metric is stroke volume.

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This is an old paper, but I had not seen it. An interesting research study would be to test the impact of rapamycin on MaxHR.

I’ve found that my MaxHR is about 20 to 30 years better (i.e. 20 to 30 beats per minute higher) than the typical age-driven predictors would predict, but I haven’t monitored it closely and nor did I do pre and post testing to see the rapamycin impact. Another biomarker for people to track pre and post rapamycin (and report here).

A new study by a group led by Catherine Proenza, PhD and Roger Bannister, PhD from the University of Colorado School of Medicine reports that one of the reasons for the age-dependent reduction in maximum heart rate is that aging depresses the spontaneous electrical activity of the heart’s natural pacemaker, the sinoatrial node.

A dissertation from Eric D. Larson, a graduate from Proenza’s lab in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, is described in the article. Larson said, “I utilized a method to record ECGs from conscious mice and found that maximum heart rate was slower in older mice, just as it is in older people. This result wasn’t unexpected. But what was completely new was that the slower maxHR was because the individual pacemaker cells – called sinoatrial myocytes, or ‘SAMs’ – from old mice just couldn’t beat as fast as SAMs from young mice.”

The researchers recorded the tiny electrical signals from the isolated cells and found that SAMs from old mice beat more slowly, even when they were fully stimulated by the fight-or-flight response which can be observed in these individual cells. The slower beating rate was due to a limited set of changes in the action potential waveform, the electrical signal that is generated by the cells. The changes were caused by altered behavior of some ion channels in the membranes of the older cells. (Ion channels are proteins that conduct electricity across the cell membrane. Imagine a balloon with little tiny pinholes that open and close to let the air in and out; ion channels are like the pinholes.)

  1. Eric D. Larson, Joshua R. St. Clair, Whitney A. Sumner, Roger A. Bannister, and Cathy Proenza. Depressed pacemaker activity of sinoatrial node myocytes contributes to the age-dependent decline in maximum heart rate. PNAS, October 2013

My VO2Max at age 60 was 56.8. Recently tested again, age 74=48.6. I do have chronic bronchitis which has slowly crept up in its effects over the decades. Worst possible environment-grew up in heavy smoking household, smoked up until age 21, worked in numerous jobs with exposure to volatile vapors. But, at age 20, I began pretty intensive athletic fitness regimen which, I suppose, may have maintained health well at least so far. But, I think the body remembers and delivers payback to some extent as we age.

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Pre Rapa my max HR was 170. Two years later it was still 170. A further year on and I’ve had three readings over that level, the highest of which was 180.
Note this happened in late summer hot temperatures - now it is much cooler my HR doesn’t reach much above 160 when doing HIIT, so l have a “reserve “ for when the body needs extra cooling.
Will be interesting to see where it peaks next summer.
(56y.o.)

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Sorry if this was already discussed, and most likely it was!, but how does everyone measure their vo2max?

I am not so concerned about getting the most accurate number, meaning, I don’t feel I need to go to a $$$ lab and do anything too fancy.

I’m just looking for a baseline, even if it’s not accurate, so I can track myself over the years to make sure I’m not losing ground. So I guess I’m looking for a way to track my progress accurately.

Hi Beth! You can try this Cooper Test - 12 minute run to assess your vo2max
There are many other websites where you can calculate your VO2Max based on the Cooper test

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When I was on the job, the Fire Department tested our VO2Max every three years or so. At one test, the doctor told me I had the second-highest score. The guy with the highest score was a smoker. Go figure.

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Some options are discussed in this thread. Typically an academic exercise physiology lab in major cities / major universities (or even community colleges) are cheap options: Budding Supercentenarians: What is your VO2Max target at age 100?

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Max HR also decrease with elevation - about 1 beat per minute for every 1000 feet of elevation
I live at nearly 7,000 ft

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For those who have an Oura ring - there is an option to do a 6 minute walk test which calculates a VO2 max based on how far you walk in 6 minutes.
Look for the 3 bars in the top right corner and scroll down to heart health and take the test.
Mine reports as 44

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I did my VO2 max at UC Davis Sports Medicine Clinic only because of standardized methods, their experience and comparison data they have across age groups and different athletic abilities. They have great consultation included to improve performance. I was stunned to learn that ultra athletes can have VO2 Max near 150.

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I think that’s unlikely. You might be thinking of another stat. Maybe HRV? No one has ever recorded a VO2 max over 100.

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I had to take him at his word since I didn’t know anything about levels at the time. But I do recall he said there were some (few) that were above even ultra athlete level which I can only assume place in that category. All I do know, is I’m not one of them.

It is interesting about the standardization. When you look at the Cooper test, distance covered over 12 minutes, it doesn’t account for the reduced mobility of an older walker/runner. If you wanted an equivalent, you could put a younger person in tight jeans or a tuxedo to making him/her “equivalent” a 70 year old’s mobility when taking the test. I think using a rowing machine like Concept 2 would be a fairer standardization between age groups for VO2 max. VO2max Calculator for Indoor Rowing | Concept2

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I don’t know if if makes any difference in the test measurements or results between equipment used, but I was hooked up to all the respiratory, CV monitoring gear and did bicycling various levels to (guess calibrate), ramp up, then flat out to failure and a bit beyond.

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