8 results on '"Walet S"'
Search Results
2. Physical training and healthy diet improved bowel symptoms, quality of life and fatigue in children with inflammatory bowel disease
- Author
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Scheffers, L E, Vos, I K, Utens, E M W J, Dieleman, G C, Walet, S, Escher, J C, van den Berg, L E, Pediatrics, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology, Internal Medicine, and Cardiology
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Physical activity programs have been suggested as adjunctive therapy in adult IBD patients. We assessed the effects of a 12-week lifestyle intervention in children with IBD. METHODS: This study was a randomized semi-crossover controlled trial, investigating a 12-week lifestyle program (3 physical training sessions per week plus personalized healthy dietary advice) in children with IBD. Endpoints were physical fitness (maximal and submaximal exercise capacity, strength, and core stability), patient-reported outcomes (quality of life, fatigue, and fears for exercise), clinical disease activity (fecal calprotectin and disease activity scores), and nutritional status (energy balance and body composition). Change in maximal exercise capacity (peakVO2) was the primary endpoint, all others were secondary endpoints. RESULTS: Fifteen patients (median age 15 [IQR:12-16]) completed the program. At baseline, peak VO2 was reduced (median 73.3% [58.8-100.9] of predicted). After the 12-week program compared to the control period, peakVO2 did not change significantly, exercise capacity measured by 6-minute walking test and core-stability did. While medical treatment remained unchanged, PUCAI disease activity scores decreased significantly versus the control period (15 [3-25] vs 2.5 [0-5], p=0.012), and fecal calprotectin also decreased significantly but not versus the control period. Quality of life (IMPACT-III) improved on 4 out of 6 domains and total score (+13 points) versus the control period. Parents-reported quality of life on the Child health questionnaire and total fatigue score (PedsQol MFS) also improved significantly versus the control period. CONCLUSIONS: A 12-week lifestyle intervention improved bowel symptoms, quality of life, and fatigue in Pediatric IBD patients.Trial registration number: www.trialregister.nl as Trial NL8181.
- Published
- 2023
3. A 12-week lifestyle intervention:effects on fatigue, fear, and nutritional status in children with a Fontan circulation
- Author
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Scheffers, L. E., Helbing, W. A., Pereira, T., Walet, S., Utens, E. M.W.J., Dulfer, K., van den Berg, L. E., Scheffers, L. E., Helbing, W. A., Pereira, T., Walet, S., Utens, E. M.W.J., Dulfer, K., and van den Berg, L. E.
- Abstract
Introduction: Children and adolescents with a Fontan circulation are less physically active compared to healthy peers. In the current study, effects of a 12-week lifestyle intervention on fatigue, fears regarding exercise, caloric intake, rest energy expenditure (REE), and body composition were measured in children with a Fontan circulation. Methods: This study was a semi-cross-over randomized controlled trial. The lifestyle intervention consisted of a 12-week high-weight resistance training (three supervised training sessions a week) supported by high-protein diet (>2 g/kg) and tailored recommended caloric intake. Fatigue (measured by the validated PedsQol Multidimensional Fatigue Scale), fears regarding exercise (measured on a fear thermometer), REE (measured using indirect calorimetry), caloric intake and body composition using air displacement plethysmography, and four-skinfold method were measured before and after the intervention and control period. Results: Twenty-seven pediatric Fontan patients, median age 12.9 years (IQR: 10.5–16.2), of the included 28 patients successfully completed the program. Before training, both child- and parent-reported levels of fatigue were significantly worse on all domains (general, sleep/rest, and cognitive fatigue) compared to healthy peers. After training, parent-reported fatigue significantly improved on the general and cognitive fatigue domains [effect size +16 points (7–25), p < 0.001, and +10 points (2–17), p = 0.015, compared to the control period]. Before training, fear regarding exercise scored on the fear thermometer was low for both children and parents (median score 1 and 2, respectively, on a scale of 0–8). After training, child-reported fear decreased further compared to the control period [effect size −1.4 points (−2.3 to −0.6), p = 0.001]. At baseline, children had increased REE +12% compared to reference values, which did not change after exercise
- Published
- 2023
4. Physical training and high-protein diet improved muscle strength, parent-reported fatigue, and physical quality of life in children with Pompe disease
- Author
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Scheffers, L. E., Somers, O. C., Dulfer, K., Dieleman, G. C., Walet, S., van der Giessen, L. J., van der Ploeg, A. T., van den Hout, J. M.P., van den Berg, L. E., Scheffers, L. E., Somers, O. C., Dulfer, K., Dieleman, G. C., Walet, S., van der Giessen, L. J., van der Ploeg, A. T., van den Hout, J. M.P., and van den Berg, L. E.
- Abstract
Exercise has proven to be an effective adjuvant treatment to enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in mildly affected adult Pompe patients. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of a 12-week tailored lifestyle intervention, consisting of physical training and a high protein diet (2 grams/kg), in children with Pompe disease. This randomized controlled semi-crossover trial investigated the effects of a lifestyle intervention on the primary outcome: exercise capacity. Secondary outcomes were: muscle strength, core stability, motor function, physical activity levels, quality of life, fatigue, fear of exercise, caloric intake, energy balance, body composition, and safety. Fourteen Pompe patients with a median age of 10.6 [IQR: 7.2–14.5], of whom six classic infantile patients, participated in the lifestyle intervention. At baseline, patients had a lower exercise capacity compared to healthy peers (median 70.3% [IQR: 54.8%–98.6%] of predicted). After the intervention, absolute Peak VO2 improved significantly (1279 mL/min [1012.5–2006] vs. 1352 mL/min [1101.5–2069], p = 0.039), but not compared to the control period. Muscle strength of the hip flexors, hip abductors, elbow extensors, neck extensors, knee extensors, and core stability improved significantly compared to the control period. Children reported a significant increase on the change in health domain of quality of life, parents reported significantly better scores on the quality of life domains: physical functioning, change in health, family cohesion, and fatigue. A 12-week tailored lifestyle intervention for children with Pompe disease seemed safe and led to improvements in muscle strength, core stability, quality of life, and parent-reported fatigue. Pompe patients with a stable disease trajectory seemed to benefit the most from the intervention.
- Published
- 2023
5. Physical Training and Healthy Diet Improved Bowel Symptoms, Quality of Life, and Fatigue in Children With Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
- Author
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Scheffers LE, Vos IK, Utens EMWJ, Dieleman GC, Walet S, Escher JC, and van den Berg LEM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Child, Adolescent, Diet, Healthy, Exercise, Fatigue etiology, Fatigue therapy, Quality of Life, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases complications, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Physical activity programs have been suggested as adjunctive therapy in adult inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients. We assessed the effects of a 12-week lifestyle intervention in children with IBD., Methods: This study was a randomized semi-crossover controlled trial, investigating a 12-week lifestyle program (3 physical training sessions per week plus personalized healthy dietary advice) in children with IBD. Endpoints were physical fitness (maximal and submaximal exercise capacity, strength, and core stability), patient-reported outcomes (quality of life, fatigue, and fears for exercise), clinical disease activity (fecal calprotectin and disease activity scores), and nutritional status (energy balance and body composition). Change in maximal exercise capacity (peak VO 2 ) was the primary endpoint; all others were secondary endpoints., Results: Fifteen patients (median age 15 [IQR: 12-16]) completed the program. At baseline, peak VO 2 was reduced (median 73.3% [58.8-100.9] of predicted). After the 12-week program, compared to the control period, peak VO 2 did not change significantly; exercise capacity measured by 6-minute walking test and core-stability did. While medical treatment remained unchanged, Pediatric Crohn's Disease Activity Index decreased significantly versus the control period (15 [3-25] vs 2.5 [0-5], P = 0.012), and fecal calprotectin also decreased significantly but not versus the control period. Quality of life (IMPACT-III) improved on 4 out of 6 domains and total score (+13 points) versus the control period. Parents-reported quality of life on the child health questionnaire and total fatigue score (PedsQoL Multidimensional Fatigue Scale) also improved significantly versus the control period., Conclusions: A 12-week lifestyle intervention improved bowel symptoms, quality of life, and fatigue in pediatric IBD patients., Competing Interests: J.C.E. received institutional research support from MSD, AbbVie, and Janssen. L.E.M.v.d.B. has received research support from “Maag Darm Lever Stichting,” “Stichting Vrienden van Sophia,” and the “Beatrix spierfonds.” The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer on behalf of European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition and North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Physical training and high-protein diet improved muscle strength, parent-reported fatigue, and physical quality of life in children with Pompe disease.
- Author
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Scheffers LE, Somers OC, Dulfer K, Dieleman GC, Walet S, van der Giessen LJ, van der Ploeg AT, van den Hout JMP, and van den Berg LE
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Exercise, Fatigue, Muscle Strength physiology, Quality of Life, Adolescent, Diet, High-Protein, Glycogen Storage Disease Type II therapy
- Abstract
Exercise has proven to be an effective adjuvant treatment to enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in mildly affected adult Pompe patients. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of a 12-week tailored lifestyle intervention, consisting of physical training and a high protein diet (2 grams/kg), in children with Pompe disease. This randomized controlled semi-crossover trial investigated the effects of a lifestyle intervention on the primary outcome: exercise capacity. Secondary outcomes were: muscle strength, core stability, motor function, physical activity levels, quality of life, fatigue, fear of exercise, caloric intake, energy balance, body composition, and safety. Fourteen Pompe patients with a median age of 10.6 [IQR: 7.2-14.5], of whom six classic infantile patients, participated in the lifestyle intervention. At baseline, patients had a lower exercise capacity compared to healthy peers (median 70.3% [IQR: 54.8%-98.6%] of predicted). After the intervention, absolute Peak VO
2 improved significantly (1279 mL/min [1012.5-2006] vs. 1352 mL/min [1101.5-2069], p = 0.039), but not compared to the control period. Muscle strength of the hip flexors, hip abductors, elbow extensors, neck extensors, knee extensors, and core stability improved significantly compared to the control period. Children reported a significant increase on the change in health domain of quality of life, parents reported significantly better scores on the quality of life domains: physical functioning, change in health, family cohesion, and fatigue. A 12-week tailored lifestyle intervention for children with Pompe disease seemed safe and led to improvements in muscle strength, core stability, quality of life, and parent-reported fatigue. Pompe patients with a stable disease trajectory seemed to benefit the most from the intervention., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Effects of 5 Years of Growth Hormone Treatment on Growth and Body Composition in Patients with Temple Syndrome.
- Author
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Juriaans AF, Trueba-Timmermans DJ, Kerkhof GF, Grootjen LN, Walet S, Sas TCJ, Rotteveel J, Zwaveling-Soonawala N, Verrijn Stuart AA, and Hokken-Koelega ACS
- Subjects
- Child, Adult, Humans, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I metabolism, Growth Hormone, Body Composition, Uniparental Disomy, Body Height, Human Growth Hormone therapeutic use, Human Growth Hormone pharmacology, Prader-Willi Syndrome
- Abstract
Introduction: Temple syndrome (TS14) is a rare imprinting disorder caused by maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 14, paternal deletion of 14q32.2, or an isolated methylation defect. Most patients with TS14 develop precocious puberty. Some patients with TS14 are treated with growth hormone (GH). However, evidence for the effectiveness of GH treatment in patients with TS14 is limited., Methods: This study describes the effect of GH treatment in 13 children and provides a subgroup analysis of 5 prepubertal children with TS14. We studied height, weight, body composition by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, resting energy expenditure (REE), and laboratory parameters during 5 years of GH treatment., Results: In the entire group, mean (95% CI) height SDS increased significantly during 5 years of GH treatment from -1.78 (-2.52; -1.04) to 0.11 (-0.66; 0.87). Fat mass percentage SDS decreased significantly during the first year of GH, and lean body mass (LBM) SDS and LBM index increased significantly during 5 years of treatment. IGF-1 and IGF-BP3 levels rose rapidly during GH treatment, and the IGF-1/IGF-BP3 molar ratio remained relatively low. Thyroid hormone levels, fasting serum glucose, and insulin levels remained normal. In the prepubertal group, median (interquartile range [IQR]) height SDS, LBM SDS, and LBM index also increased. REE was normal at start and did not change during 1 year of treatment. Five patients reached adult height and their median (IQR) height SDS was 0.67 (-1.83; -0.01)., Conclusion: GH treatment in patients with TS14 normalizes height SDS and improves body composition. There were no adverse effects or safety concerns during GH treatment., (© 2023 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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8. Study Protocol of the Exercise Study: Unraveling Limitations for Physical Activity in Children With Chronic Diseases in Order to Target Them With Tailored Interventions-A Randomized Cross Over Trial.
- Author
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Scheffers LE, Helbing WA, Utens EMWJ, Dieleman GC, Dulfer K, Noske J, van den Broek EA, Walet S, Olieman JF, Escher JC, Pijnenburg MW, van der Ploeg AT, and van den Berg LE
- Abstract
Introduction: Physical activity is associated with many physiological and psychological health benefits across the lifespan. Children with a chronic disease often have lower levels of daily physical activity, and a decreased exercise capacity compared to healthy peers. In order to learn more about limitations for physical activity, we investigate children with four different chronic diseases: children with a Fontan circulation, children with Broncho Pulmonary Dysplasia (BPD), Pompe disease and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Each of these diseases is likely to interfere with physical activity in a different way. Knowing the specific limitations for physical activity would make it possible to target these, and increase physical activity by a personalized intervention. The aim of this study is to first investigate limitations for physical activity in children with various chronic diseases. Secondly, to measure the effects of a tailored exercise intervention, possibly including a personalized dietary advice and/or psychological counseling, on exercise capacity, endurance, quality of life, fatigue, fear for exercise, safety, muscle strength, physical activity levels, energy balance, and body composition. Methods and Analysis: This randomized crossover trial will aim to include 72 children, aged 6-18 years, with one of the following diagnosis: a Fontan circulation, BPD, Pompe disease and IBD. Eligible patients will participate in the 12-week tailored exercise intervention and are either randomized to start with a control period or start with the intervention. The tailored 12-week exercise interventions, possibly including a personalized dietary advice and/or psychological counseling, will be designed based on the found limitations for physical activity in each disease group during baseline measurements by the Rotterdam Exercise Team. Effects of the tailored training interventions will be measured on the following endpoints: exercise capacity (measured by cardiopulmonary exercise test), endurance, physical activity levels, muscle strength, quality of life, fatigue, fear for exercise, disease activity, cardiac function (in children with a Fontan circulation), energy balance, and body composition. Ethics and Dissemination: Conducted according to the Declaration of Helsinki and Good Clinical Practice. Medical-ethical approval was obtained. Trial Registration Number: NL8181, https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/8181., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Scheffers, Helbing, Utens, Dieleman, Dulfer, Noske, van den Broek, Walet, Olieman, Escher, Pijnenburg, van der Ploeg and van den Berg.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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