摘要:Respiratory gas exchange threshold measurements are a reference standard for measuring sustainable exercise capacity (McLellan and Skinner, 1981). A recent consensus report suggested that ‘threshold based’ exercise prescription may be superior (Mezzani et al., 2012) to the relative percent of VO2 reserve or heart rate (HR) reserve that has been the standard for exercise prescription for a generation (ACSM, 2014). Further, respiratory gas exchange has technical requirements that place it out of the range of the health-fitness community. An alternative approach, which takes advantage of the fact that air moving into and out of the respiratory system creates sound (detectable as breathing frequency and sound volume) might provide an viable approach to threshold determination (Foster et al., 2012). This approach suggests that ventilatory threshold (VT) can be identified by an increase in breathing frequency and that respiratory compensation threshold (RCT) can be identified by a large increase in the perceived sound intensity. Breath sounds from digital recording are at least potentially capable of being analyzed in a way that allows investigators to distinguish changes in the acoustic character of breathing. The purpose of this study was to determine whether acoustic analysis of breath sounds, based on a proprietary algorithm and similar to that used previously (Foster et al., 2012), was systematically related to VT and RCT.