Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior in Children With Congenital Heart Disease

Background Children with congenital heart disease (CHD) are thought to have low levels of physical activity (PA), but few studies have used objective measures of PA in this population. Methods and Results We recruited patients with mild, moderate, and severe CHD and cardiac transplant recipients, ag...

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Published inJournal of the American Heart Association Vol. 6; no. 3
Main Authors Voss, Christine, Duncombe, Stephanie L., Dean, Paige H., Souza, Astrid M., Harris, Kevin C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England John Wiley and Sons Inc 01.03.2017
Wiley
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Summary:Background Children with congenital heart disease (CHD) are thought to have low levels of physical activity (PA), but few studies have used objective measures of PA in this population. Methods and Results We recruited patients with mild, moderate, and severe CHD and cardiac transplant recipients, aged 8 to 19 years, from pediatric cardiology clinics throughout British Columbia and Yukon, Canada. Participants were fitted with an ActiGraph accelerometer to be worn over the right hip for 7 days. Daily means were estimated for a variety of accelerometry‐derived metrics, including moderate‐to‐vigorous PA and percentage of sedentary time if they had at least 3 valid days of accelerometry data. Participants also completed a PA questionnaire. We included 90 participants (aged 13.6±2.7 years; 54% male), of which 26 had mild CHD, 26 had moderate CHD, 29 had severe CHD, and 9 were cardiac transplant recipients. Median daily moderate‐to‐vigorous PA was 43 min/day (interquartile range: 28.9–56.9 min/day), and 8% met PA guidelines of 60 minutes of moderate‐to‐vigorous PA at least 6 days a week. There were no significant differences in any accelerometry‐derived metric according to CHD severity. Boys were significantly more active and less sedentary than girls. Activity declined and sedentary behaviors increased with age in both sexes. Sports participation was common, including competitive out‐of‐school clubs (57%). PA restrictions from cardiologists were rare (15%). Conclusions We found normal age–sex patterns of PA in children with CHD. There were no differences in PA by CHD severity, suggesting that sociocultural factors are likely important determinants of PA in these children.
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Preliminary analyses of this work were presented as an oral presentation at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions, November 12 to 16, 2016, in New Orleans, LA and as a poster presentation at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress, October 22 to 25, 2016, in Montreal, Canada.
ISSN:2047-9980
2047-9980
DOI:10.1161/JAHA.116.004665