Validation of a Photoplethysmographic Heart Rate Monitor: Polar OH1

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TitreValidation of a Photoplethysmographic Heart Rate Monitor: Polar OH1
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursHermand E, Cassirame J, Ennequin G, Hue O
JournalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume40
Pagination462-467
Date PublishedJUL
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0172-4622
Mots-clésAccuracy, Bland-Altman, exercise, photoplethysmography, skin type, training load
Résumé

This study assessed the validity of a photoplethysmographic heart rate (HR) monitor, the Polar OH1 in various sports performed in ecological conditions: running, cycling, soccer, kayaking, walking, tennis and fitness. Seventy trained athletes (56 males, 14 females) wore the Polar OH1 armband and the H7 chest belt during training. A total of 390h and 38min of recording were compared using a 20-bpm window to assess data quality, and Bland-Altman agreements and ICC analyses were used to test accuracy. Linear regression analyses evaluated the HR accuracy and correlation with skin tone. Training loads (TRIMPs) were compared for each session. Reliability was high for endurance sports (>99%) and lower for sports involving arm movements (92 similar to 95%). Biases were slightly negative for all sports, whereas widths of limits of agreement varied from 7-20bpm. Bland-Altman agreements were all under 5% except tennis, kayak and fitness. HR accuracy was positively correlated to skin tone (p<0.05). Finally, TRIMPs from the OH1 device were inferior to criterion's (except walking and soccer), within a 3% range from reference. Hence, OH1 represents a valid tool to monitor instantaneous HR and training load, especially for endurance sports.

DOI10.1055/a-0875-4033