| Literature DB >> 30621667 |
Sarah L West1,2, Laura Banks3, Jane E Schneiderman2,4, Jessica E Caterini2,4, Samantha Stephens5,6, Gillian White2,4, Shilpa Dogra7, Greg D Wells8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical activity (PA) is associated with a diverse range of health benefits. International guidelines suggest that children should be participating in a minimum of 60 min of moderate to vigorous intensity PA per day to achieve these benefits. However, current guidelines are intended for healthy children, and thus may not be applicable to children with a chronic disease. Specifically, the dose of PA and disease specific exercise considerations are not included in these guidelines, leaving such children with few, if any, evidence-based informed suggestions pertaining to PA. Thus, the purpose of this narrative review was to consider current literature in the area of exercise as medicine and provide practical applications for exercise in five prevalent pediatric chronic diseases: respiratory, congenital heart, metabolic, systemic inflammatory/autoimmune, and cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Chronic disease; Exercise; Medicine; Pediatric; Physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30621667 PMCID: PMC6325687 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-018-1377-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Fig. 1Flow chart of the use exercise as medicine and current suggestions for pediatric chronic disease. Legend: Red text identifies steps in the process that the current narrative reivew may help inform
Summary of practical applications for the use of exercise as medicine for pediatric chronic disease. Note that these suggestions are not formal exercise recommendations; rather suggesions based on the current narrative review
| Disease | Aerobic Exercise | HIIT Exercise | Resistance Training | Flexibility Training | General Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CF | F: Min 2x/week, progressive up to 7x/week | F: 2x/week | F: 2-3x/week, non-consecutive days | F: 2x/week | Overall goal for exercise prescription in most chronic diseases is to have the patient achieve PA guidelines of 60 min/day using a combination of types of exercises described. |
| Asthma | F: Min 3x/week, progressive up to 7x/week | No evidence to support safety. Avoid at this time | F: 2-3x/week, non-consecutive days | F: 2x/week | |
| CHD | F: Progressive up to 7x/week | No evidence to support safety. Avoid at this time | F: 2-3x/week, non-consecutive days | F: 2x/week | |
| Obesity & T2D | F: Progressive up to 7x/week | F: 2 x/week | F: 2-3x/week, non-consecutive days | F: 2x/week | |
| JIA | F: 2–3 x/week | No evidence to support safety. Avoid at this time | F: 2-3x/week, non-consecutive days | F: 2x/week | |
| Cancer | F: 2–4 x/week; progressive up to 3–5 x/week | No evidence to support safety. Avoid at this time | F: 1-3x/week, non-consecutive days | F: 2x/week |
CF Cystic Fibrosis
CHD Congenital Heart Disease
T2D Type 2 Diabetes
JIA Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
F Frequency of exercise
I Intensity of exercise
T Time, i.e., amount of exercise
Ty Type of exercise
HR Heart rate