| Literature DB >> 20871857 |
Abstract
The present paper provides a review of the literature regarding exercise testing, exercise capacity, and the role of exercise training in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). Different measures of exercise capacity are discussed, including both simple and more advanced exercise parameters. Different groups of patients, including shunt lesions, pulmonary valvar stenosis, patients after completion of Fontan circulation, and patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension are discussed separately in more detail. It has been underscored that an active lifestyle, taking exercise limitations and potential risks of exercise into account is of utmost importance. Increased exercise capacity in these patients is furthermore correlated with an improvement of objective and subjective quality of life.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20871857 PMCID: PMC2943096 DOI: 10.1155/2010/791980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Indications for exercise testing in children.
| (1) Assesses physical capacity for recreational, athletic and occupational recommendations | |
| (2) Evaluates specific pathophysiologic characteristics | |
| (a) provides indications for surgery, therapy, or additional tests | |
| (b) evaluates functional postoperative success | |
| (c) diagnoses disease | |
| (3) Assesses adequacy of therapy | |
| (4) Assesses risk for future complications in existing disease | |
| (5) Instills confidence in child and parents | |
| (6) Motivates child for further exercise or weight loss |
Modified after Bar-Or [11].
Criteria for terminating exercise testing in children with CHD.
| (1) Clinical | Symptoms as chest pain, severe headache, dizziness, chills, sustained nausea, inappropriate dyspnoea |
| Signs as sustained pallor, clammy skin, disorientation, inappropriate affect | |
| Patient requests termination of the test | |
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| (2) Electrocardiography | Failure of heart rate to increase with exercise, and extreme fatigue, dizziness, or other symptoms suggestive of insufficient cardiac output |
| Premature ventricular contractions (PVC) with increasing frequency | |
| Ventricular tachycardia (run of >3 PVCs) | |
| Supraventricular tachycardia | |
| ST segmental depression, or elevation, of more than 3 mm | |
| Triggering of atrioventricular (AV) block (2nd degree AV-block type Mobitz or 3rd degree AV block) by exercise | |
| Triggering of QTc lengthening >500 ms | |
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| (3) Blood pressure | Excessive levels (age dependent)—systolic blood pressure >250 mmHg, diastolic blood pressure >125 mmHg |
| Progressive fall in systolic blood pressure with increasing work rate | |
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| (4) Progressive fall in oxygen saturation to <90% or a 10-point drop from resting saturation in a symptomatic patient | |
Modified from Connuck [8] and Paridon et al. [12].
Figure 1The VE/VCO2 slope in a 13 year old boy with a Fontan circulation and in a 13-year old healthy boy.
Figure 2The OUES during an exercise test in a healthy 13-year-old boy, in a sex- and age-matched patient with tetralogy of Fallot, and in a sex- and age-matched Fontan patient.
Recommendations for competitive sport participation.
| The following congenital heart defects can participate in all sports without restrictions |
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| ASD (closed or small unoperated) and patent foramen ovale (Except Scuba diving in PFO) |
| VSD (closed or small unoperated) |
| AVSD (Only mild AV insufficiency; no significant subaortic stenosis or arrhythmia) |
| Partial or complete anomalous pulmonary venous connection (No significant pulmonary or systemic venous obstruction, no pulmonary |
| hypertension or exercise-induced arrhythmia) |
| Persistent ductus arteriosus (operated) (6 months post closure and no residual pulmonary hypertension) |
| Mild pulmonary stenosis (normal RV, normal ECG) |
| Mild aortic stenosis (With the exception of high static, high dynamic) (Mean gradient <21 mmHg; no history of arrhythmias, no dizziness, |
| syncope, or angina pectoris) |
| Transposition of the great arteries after arterial switch (With the exception of high static, high dynamic) (No or only mild neo-aortic |
| insufficiency; no significant pulmonary stenosis; no signs of ischemia or arrhythmia on exercise ECG) |
Modified from Pelliccia et al. [13].