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1.
J Burn Care Res ; 39(6): 881-886, 2018 10 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29596597

ABSTRACT

This study tested the hypothesis that participation in a rehabilitation exercise program following hospital discharge would increase the level of physical activity in burned children than that seen in free-living nonburned children. Thirty-one severely burned children (12 ± 3 years, 144 ± 18 cm, 42 ± 17 kg, 48 ± 12% TBSA burns) were matched to 31 nonburned children (12 ± 3 y, 147 ± 17 cm, 45 ± 15 kg) based on age and sex. Pedometers were used to track minutes and steps in burned children during their exercise rehabilitation and nonburned children under free-living conditions (healthy control). We found that the average minutes of activity per day was lower in burned children (56 ± 25minutes) than in nonburned children (74 ± 28 minutes, P < .05). However, no difference was detected for average steps per day or week or maximal minutes in 1 day or week. At discharge, burn children had peak torque and mean power values that were 61% of nonburned values, and exercise training improved these by 27 and 28%, respectively (88 and 89% of nonburned values; each P ≤ .0001). Likewise, cardiorespiratory fitness at discharge was 72% of nonburned values, and exercise training improved fitness by 10% (82% of nonburned values, P < .05). Percentage TBSA burned was inversely associated with steps (r = -0.54, P = .001) and minutes of activity (r = -0.53, P = .002), accounting for 28-29% of the variability in burned children. These results show that, at discharge, burned children are capable of matching steps of physical activity levels seen in nonburned healthy children. Physical activity monitoring may be a viable option for continued improvement of physical exercise capacity when burned children are under free-living conditions.


Subject(s)
Burns/rehabilitation , Cardiorespiratory Fitness , Exercise Therapy/methods , Muscle Strength/physiology , Case-Control Studies , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Monitoring, Ambulatory , Torque
2.
J Burn Care Res ; 39(5): 815-822, 2018 08 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29596612

ABSTRACT

Whether burn injury affects boys and men differently is currently unknown. To test the hypothesis that burned boys have lower exercise capacity and exercise training-induced responses compared with burned men, 40 young boys (12 ± 4 years, 149 ± 20 cm, 46 ± 18 kg) were matched to 35 adult men (33 ± 9 years, 174 ± 10 cm, 84 ± 16 kg) based on extent of burn injury (total body surface area burned, boys 46 ± 14% vs men 47 ± 30, P = .85) and length of hospital stay (boys 33 ± 23 vs men 41 ± 32 days, P = .23). Strength (peak torque) and cardiorespiratory fitness (peak VO2) were normalized to kg of lean body mass for group comparisons. Each group was also compared with normative age-sex matched values at discharge and after an aerobic and resistance exercise training (RET) program. A two-way factorial analysis of covariance assessed interaction and main effects of group and time. We found that boys and men showed similar pre-RET to post-RET increases in total lean (~4%) and fat (7%) mass (each P ≤ .008). Both groups had lower age-sex matched norm values at discharge for peak torque (boys 36%; men 51% of normative values) and peak VO2 (boys: 44; men: 59%; each P ≤ .0001). Boys strength were 13-15 per cent lower than men at discharge and after RET (main effect for group, P < .0001). Cardiorespiratory fitness improved to a greater extent in men (19%) compared with boys (10%) after the RET (group × time interaction, P = .011). These results show that at discharge and after RET, burn injury may have age-dependent effects and should be considered when evaluating efficacy and progress of the exercise program.


Subject(s)
Burns/physiopathology , Burns/rehabilitation , Cardiorespiratory Fitness/physiology , Exercise Tolerance/physiology , Muscle Strength/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Exercise Therapy , Humans , Length of Stay , Male , Sex Factors , Young Adult
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